Seton Hall Magazine, Winter/Spring 2013

Seton Hall magazine is published by the Department of Public Relations and Marketing in the Division of University Advancement. http://www.shu.edu

SETON HALL
Winter/Spring 2013
A home for the mind, the heart and the spirit
NO BEL LAUREATE JOHN NASH AND OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST MISSY FR A N K LIN V IS IT C A M P U S
SETON HALL’S NEWEST PIRATES: THE H IS T O R IC C LA S S O F 2 0 1 6
After the Storm
Helping Those Hit Hard by Sandy
SETON HALL
Winter/Spring 2013 Vol. 23 Issue 3
Seton Hall magazine is published by
the Department of Public Relations
and Marketing in the Division of
University Advancement.
President
A. Gabriel Esteban, Ph.D.
Vice President for
University Advancement
David J. Bohan, M.B.A.
Associate Vice President for
Public Relations and Marketing
Dan Kalmanson, M.A.
In this issue
features
18 After the Storm
Many in the Seton Hall community
rushed to provide assistance after
Superstorm Sandy.
24 This I Believe
Director of Publications/
University Editor
Pegeen Hopkins, M.S.J.
Art Director
Elyse M. Carter
Design and Production
Linda Campos Eisenberg
Copy Editor
Kim de Bourbon
Assistant Editor
Erin Healy
A close-up look at our newest Pirates,
the historic Class of 2016.
departments
2
4
12
From Presidents Hall
HALLmarks
Possibilities
Anna Negrón ’13 puts her heart
into her performance.
News & Notes Editors
Dan Nugent ’03
Kathryn Moran
Send your comments and suggestions
by mail to: Seton Hall magazine,
Department of Public Relations
and Marketing, 457 Centre Street,
South Orange, NJ 07079; by email
to SHUwriter@shu.edu; or by phone
at 973-378-9834.
12
14
Roaming the Hall
Jose Lopez makes advances in the
emerging field of microplasmas while
making physics accessible for students.
16
18
Profile
Mary Ann Christopher, M.S.N. ’83,
has dedicated her career to expanding
community-based health care.
Cover photo by Billy Seeliger; photo
on facing page by Milan Stanic ’11
30
34
36
Sports at the Hall
Pirates in Print
Spirit of Giving
Joseph Farinella ’79/J.D. ’93
www.shu.edu
38
Alumni News & Notes
48
Last Word
And the Survey Says…
24
F RO M P R E S I D E N T S H A L L |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
A . G A B R I E L E S T E BA N , P H . D.
T
he ever-growing numbers of our Seton Hall
community who exemplify this trait continue to
remind us that servant leadership is more than an idea
or a phrase. It is — in actuality — a way of life.
Each spring, at our annual Charter Day Convocation,
The Gift in Giving
we celebrate the Catholic intellectual tradition our
founders embodied and sought to perpetuate, maintaining
our commitment to stand as a “University of Opportunity”
We often use the phrase “servant leadership” to describe an
We reaffirm our core belief that
academic achievement brings with
it a complementary responsibility
to help bring about a better world.
for students from all walks of life. We reaffirm our
core belief that academic achievement brings with it a
invaluable personal trait cultivated by and within the Seton Hall
community. Servant leaders embody empathy to those around
complementary responsibility to use our talents to help
coordinates much of our off-campus outreach, including
bring about a better world.
life-transforming student trips made each year to
Charter Day showcases servant leadership by honoring
At the same time, our classrooms provide myriad
them and possess foresight into the challenges and opportunities
exemplary service throughout the Seton Hall community.
For faculty and staff, we present the Bishop Bernard J.
opportunities to discern examples of servant leadership.
that lie ahead. They commit themselves to helping others grow
McQuaid Medal for Distinguished Service and the Presi-
Core courses discuss values in the light of historic texts,
dent’s Award for Student Service. At the same ceremony,
while the Stillman School of Business integrates ethical
we recognize our servant leader scholars, students who
components into its academic disciplines.
and thrive. They engender healing. They lead by example.
have received scholarships because they exemplify the
Ultimately, I see servant leadership most visibly
very spirit of service and provide inspiration for us all.
in the daily activities woven into the fabric of life at
We take much from the example of Saint Elizabeth
Seton Hall. In this issue of the magazine, we feature an
Ann Bayley Seton, for whom her nephew, Newark Bishop
article highlighting individuals who rushed to assist
James Roosevelt Bayley, named our school 35 years
victims of Superstorm Sandy. Among many acts of self-
after her death.
lessness, administrators and faculty offered assistance
A widow at age 29, she was left in dire economic
while faculty and students of the School of Health and
embraced, after her Episcopalian husband died, rendered
Medical Sciences volunteered their time to the cleanup
Mother Seton fearless. She dedicated herself to Catholic
on Staten Island.
Our alumni live out the lessons of servant leadership
Charity. The first American community of religious sisters
throughout their lives. Mary Ann Christopher, M.S.N. ’83,
was a band of Christ-driven women dedicated to serving
a regent and the CEO of the Visiting Nurse Service
the poor and the sick in a society with few safety nets.
of New York, who is profiled in this issue, makes a
Sharing with Seton Hall students Mother Seton’s
profound difference in the lives of many of the most
enduring legacy of cultivating sensitivity to the needs
vulnerable among us through her work strengthening
of others begins early — with the requirement that
community health care.
all freshmen complete at least 10 hours of community
service during their first semester.
Many students who desire to serve also find a
home in DOVE, the Division of Volunteer Efforts, which
Photo by Milan Stanic
to a diplomacy student whose home was destroyed,
straits to raise five children. Yet, the Catholic faith she
education in the United States and founded the Sisters of
2
volunteer in El Salvador and Haiti.
I encounter many other stories of servant leadership
among the alumni I meet as I travel. The efforts these
Setonians make to improve the lives of family members,
neighbors — even perfect strangers — in school systems,
hospitals or parishes across the country inspire me,
reinforcing my conviction in the power — and the
necessity — of Seton Hall’s mission to form servant
leaders for a global society. ■
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SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
HALLMARKS
sing images captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, Father
George Coyne, S.J., Ph.D., a former Vatican astronomer, led a
breathtaking tour of the history of the universe and a quest for God
during the second annual Father Stanley L. Jaki, O.S.B., Distinguished
Lecture of the Department of Physics.
Father Coyne spoke to a packed audience in
Jubilee Auditorium about the “dance of the fertile
universe,” in which the death and birth of countless
stars continue to spawn the chemical reactions
that led to the start of life.
The Hubble telescope has enabled us see to
within 200 million years of the “big bang” 13.7
billion years ago. While dramatic, the images offer
only a “narrow view” of space, Father Coyne said.
“So to answer the question ‘Did God do it?’ Well,
of course God did it, but I don’t know that from
my science. I know that from my religious faith.”
What the science shows is that God made a
universe that is very dynamic, he said. “It is not
all pre-packaged or pre-determined. Its future is
not completely settled. God is not an engineer
who designed the universe. That belittles God; that belittles science.
God is a parent. The universe is a child that God is nurturing.”
Father Coyne was director of the Vatican Observatory from 1978
to 2006 and is currently the McDevitt Chair of Religious Philosophy
at the McDevitt Center for Creativity and Innovation of Le Moyne
College in Syracuse, N.Y.
Father Jaki, who died in 2009, was a world-renowned author,
physicist, science historian, philosopher, and theologian who served
as a faculty member in Seton Hall’s Department of Physics. He was
a frequent visitor at the Vatican observatory at Castel Gandolfo,
where, Father Coyne said, “We always had exuberant conversations.”
The lecture can be viewed at www.shu.edu/go/jakilecture.
U
with a
Vatican astronomer
| AL FRANK
Honorary Degree for Archbishop Hon: A doctorate
of humane letters honoris causa was conferred
on Archbishop Savio Hon Tai-Fai, S.D.B., when he
visited Seton Hall on Nov. 8 during a six-day trip to
the East Coast. Newark Archbishop John J. Myers,
chairman of the Board of Trustees and president
of the Board of Regents, and President A. Gabriel
Esteban presided at the ceremony in the Chapel
of the Immaculate Conception. In his role as secretary for the Congregation for the Evangelization
of Peoples, Archbishop Hon is the first Chinese
archbishop to hold a senior post at the Vatican.
4
Under the leadership of assistant professor Kathleen
Rennie, Seton Hall was granted membership to an elite
group of colleges and universities around the world
recognized for exemplary programs in public relations.
This honor, known as Certification in Education for
Public Relations (CEPR), has been awarded to just 34
schools since its inception in 1989. The Public Relations
Society of America (PRSA) developed the certification
program in cooperation with educators and industry
professionals to create a global standard in public
relations education.
Schools undergo a rigorous evaluation process,
including campus visits and an eight-point assessment
in curriculum development, faculty, resources/facilities,
students and diversity/global perspective.
Rennie, Ashley Manz, the 2012 president of Seton
Hall’s chapter of the Public Relations Student Society
of America, and an adjunct professor of public relations,
Angela Chitkara, traveled to San Francisco to accept
the honor in front of the PRSA assembly.
“CEPR will help Seton Hall’s PR program shine even
brighter,” says Manz. Chitkara agrees, “It’s become our
new competitive edge. We can confidently compete with
the best. And we have the credentials to prove it.”
| E R I N H E A LY
In the RUNNING
Photo of Father Coyne by Bob Roller; photo of Archbishop Hon by Milan Stanic
Stargazing —
Great Publicity for the Publicists
Being on the road is part of life as a Pirate basketball
player, but Alexandra Maseko really racked up the miles
during exam week last semester.
In early December, the senior was flying to her hometown
of Harare, Zimbabwe. There, the finalist for the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarship met with the selection committee
for the chance to be chosen as one of two recipients
from the African nation.
Maseko’s whirlwind week began with a road
trip to Winston-Salem, N.C., where the Pirates
faced Wake Forest University on Saturday
afternoon, Dec. 8, with Maseko starting the
game and tying for the team lead with eight rebounds.
She returned with the team to Seton Hall Saturday evening
and the next day headed to the airport for her trip to Africa.
She was back in time for the Pirates’ next game on Dec. 16.
Though Maseko, a political-science major, was not selected
for the Rhodes Scholarship, she found the experience rewarding.
“It has been a great journey,” she said. “I had to go
through a lengthy application process, write multiple essays,
and it was challenging to complete alongside my schoolwork
and basketball, but it has been fun.” | A F
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SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
HALLMARKS
A ‘Most Connected’ University
TypeA
Who’s the Most Wonderful DJ of Them All?
U.S. News & World Report’s first ranking of the country’s “Most Connected
Colleges” places Seton Hall in the No. 5 spot, ahead of schools such as Ohio,
Northeastern, Carnegie Mellon and Princeton. Rankings were published as part
of the 2013 edition of U.S. News’ annual “Best Colleges” survey.
Data from 1,471 schools were evaluated in four categories: Internet speed,
Internet access, applications (advanced online functions, support of student
websites and technical support), and resources (availability of technology to
students and faculty).
Each category was scored out
of a possible 25 points and added
together to generate an overall
connectivity score out of 100.
Of all the schools that applied,
only 278 schools received a score
of 50 or above to earn a numerical
ranking. Seton Hall’s 70.8 connectivity score placed it high on the list largely
due to the school’s unique partnerships with Microsoft, Nokia, AT&T and
Samsung, enabling all incoming freshmen to receive a laptop and smartphone.
Other schools noted for their technological savvy include Maine’s Bowdoin
College (79.9), California’s University of La Verne (73.8), Auburn University
in Alabama (72.4) and the University of Miami (72.0). | E H
WSOU may have a 35-mile broadcast radius, but one student
DJ has made a name for herself on an international level.
Angelica Szani, known as “Type A” on the air, has been
named “Best U.S. College DJ” by the International Radio
Festival of Zurich, Switzerland.
Szani, a senior who hosts and produces “The Campus
Buzz,” was chosen from among more than 50 DJs from
30 universities based on a 30-minute broadcast. As the winner, she traveled to Cannes, France, in January to attend
the international music conference, Midem. | E H
Fulbright for Study in Italy
nes Angeli Murzaku, professor of religious
studies and chair of the Department of Catholic
Studies, received a Fulbright Specialists Award,
which she will use to explore the interaction of
different ethnicities and religions throughout the
south of Italy.
University Provost Larry A. Robinson noted
that Murzaku’s Fulbright, her second, signaled
“prestigious recognition of her scholarship, highly
valued in the academy, which enhances her academic reputation as well as that of the University.”
The author of several books, Murzaku is dedicated
to strengthening dialogue and interaction between
religions. She hopes her work in southern Italy
will prove monasticism can play a role in interreligious dialogue.
Murzaku, who came to Seton Hall in 1999, teaches
church history and theology. She earned her doctorate from the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome.
“I am sure that I will return deeply enriched from
my experience in Italy and ready to convey to my
students the results of my field research,” she said.
“Moreover, the Department of Catholic Studies
strives to be a center of excellence … a think tank,
a core of Seton Hall values and traditions, but most
of all, a center of dialogue for all University constituents, so I think that the Fulbright will benefit
the department as well.” | A F
I
6
Big News in the
n March, Seton Hall, along with Butler, Creighton, DePaul, Georgetown,
Marquette, Providence, St. John’s, Villanova and Xavier, formed the new
Big East athletics conference. The schools are set to commence play in the
2013-2014 academic year.
“This is a great day for Seton Hall and for all college sports,” said University
President A. Gabriel Esteban at the time of the announcement. “It marks an
inspiring return to the Big East’s roots as a showcase for the nation’s greatest
collegiate basketball programs and the extraordinary achievements of our
student-athletes. The Big East will once again revolve around, and gain its
strength from, a firm foundation of historic basketball powerhouses located
in the nation’s most vibrant metropolitan regions.”
The Big East Tournament will continue to call Madison Square Garden
its home. “Some of the most memorable moments in Seton Hall’s basketball
history have occurred in the Garden during Big East Tournaments and I look
forward to a future with many more,” President Esteban said.
The conference entered into a partnership with Fox Sports granting the
network exclusive broadcast rights. Fox Sports and its Fox Sports 1 Network
will acquire television rights to all Big East game action as part of a 12-year
contract. Under the broadcast partnership, Fox Sports will own television rights
to a wide range of marquee Big East basketball games, including the annual
Big East conference tournament.
The 10-team Big East conference will officially
commence operations on July 1, 2013. Each of
the inaugural members will be full conference
participants starting in the 2013-2014
academic year. Each school will compete
in all of the sports it currently offers.
I
Visit From a
Nobel laureate and mathematician John Forbes Nash Jr., whose
pioneering work in non-cooperative game theory has become a
standard tool in all areas of economic inquiry, is now working in the
fields of physics and cosmology.
At 84, the senior research mathematician at Princeton University
said he was still hopeful some interesting results may be forthcoming.
Nash spoke to a standing-room-only crowd during a forum on
Nov. 15 moderated by Gregory Burton, professor of psychology and
associate provost, and Anthony Loviscek, associate professor and chairman of the finance department at the Stillman School of Business.
The conversation ranged from non-cooperative game theory to the
light-hearted. Nash parried a question asking him to offer an economic
forecast, saying there was already a healthy balance between doomsayers and joy-sayers. “Whatever happens, someone’s going to be right.”
The final question came from Stillman Dean Joyce Strawser, who
asked what advice he would give students. “Consider yourselves lucky,”
and resist feelings of entitlement, Nash replied, noting that only a
select number of young people around the world have the opportunity
for higher education. | A F
Photos on this page by Milan Stanic
Nobel Laureate
BIG EAST
Whitehead School Partners
With the Philippines
The School of Diplomacy and International Relations
is forging closer ties with the Philippines through an
agreement that both sides hope will lead to broader
exchanges of students and information.
Under the partnership, the Foreign Service Institute
of the Department of Foreign Affairs in the Philippines
and the School of Diplomacy and International Relations
will link libraries to facilitate research and projects in
areas of mutual interest.
They also will share publications and information
about courses and organize conferences, seminars and
workshops in the field of diplomacy and global concerns.
It is the second such international partnership
agreement for the school. The first was signed with
Portugal in 2009.
The latest agreement was signed in November by
H.E. Jose L. Cuisia Jr., ambassador of the Republic of
the Philippines to the U.S. and Dr. A. Gabriel Esteban,
president of Seton Hall. Consul General Mario De Leon
Jr. of the Philippine Consulate General in New York
witnessed the memorandum of understanding.
Esteban said the agreement adds to existing relationships Seton Hall has with the island nation, such as
a faculty and student exchange with the University of
the Philippines.
As the first Filipino-American to lead a major U.S.
university, Esteban said the agreement was personally
gratifying as well. “This relationship is great because the
Philippines is the only predominantly Catholic country
in Asia. To establish ties back home is special.” | A F
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SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
HALLMARKS
SHU in the news
“We are highly standardized for higher education,
but that doesn’t mean we’re monolithic.”
— Stephen Landry, CIO, The Wall Street Journal, on the SHUmobile program and the deployment of technology to students and the University community
“It grew up like dandelions in the spring,
just here, there, and everywhere.
This phenomenon has a grass-roots dynamic.”
“The government found nationalism
to be a politically useful tool to rally
support to a regime in crisis.”
— Zeni Fox, Immaculate Conception Seminary School of Theology,
River Cities’ Reader, on the role of the professional lay ministry
as one of the great fruits of Vatican II
— Yinan He, Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International Relations,
The Economist, exploring China’s national identity from the 1980s on in
the content of popular culture and the politics of Sino-Japanese relations
“That the membership and power relations of the U.N. Security Council are anachronistic
and inequitable, given the geopolitical realities of the 21st century, is irrefutable.”
— Kwame Akonor, College of Arts and Sciences, Inter Press Service News Agency, on a proposed expansion of the Security Council and discussion of
African countries’ unheard demands for two permanent seats in the most powerful body at the United Nations
If you go back 100 years, three-fourths of Catholics
were in the developed world. Now those numbers
are reversed. It would be fair to reflect that.”
— Monsignor Robert J. Wister, Immaculate Conception Seminary School
of Theology, Bloomberg Businessweek, on the future of the papacy, upon the
announcement of the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI for health reasons
“We honor today a person who has
transcended bitter experiences to create
a legacy of beauty and humanity.”
— David Bossman, Sister Rose Thering Fund for Education in JewishChristian Studies, New Jersey Jewish News, on honoring Holocaust survivor
and honorary degree recipient Luna Kaufman as she presented her
personal collection of artifacts, documents and artwork to Walsh Library
“ ‘Leadership think’ is having the skills and talent to think strategically —
to understand the implications of new ideas, recognize trends and explore
their [relevance] in a broader cultural construct, and to identify potential
opportunities that arise as a result of these trends.’ ”
— Michael M. Reuter and John H. Shannon, Stillman School of Business, Leadership Excellence, discussing the requirements of great leadership
“Water does cover 70 percent of the Earth,
but only 2.5 percent of it is freshwater, and if
you break it down further, there’s only about
0.006 percent freshwater available in the world.
The population is competing for a scarcer
resource, which is what water is becoming,
because of the global demand.”
“For all students, one of the misconceptions is that
a private education is out of their reach. What students
often find is that when they actually look at the net
cost — after all of the financial aid and scholarships
are applied — the cost of attending a private university
is much more within their reach.”
— Jose Lopez, College of Arts and Sciences, CNBC, discussing the severe
water shortage occurring in much of the world
— Alyssa McCloud, Enrollment Management, U.S. News & World Report,
discussing Seton Hall’s Public Tuition Rate program for high-achieving students
“We may never get rid of all the lamprey in the Great Lakes, but if we can have fewer lamprey,
the Great Lakes will be a lot safer and the fishermen happier.”
— James Hanson, College of Arts and Sciences, NPR, discussing his research on controlling populations of invasive sea lampreys in the Great Lakes
8
BY THE NUMBERS
GreekLife at Seton Hall
10
Fraternities on campus
10%
12
Sororities on campus
Seton Hall students involved in Greek Life
1953
Year first Greek organization
(Phi Kappa Theta) was founded on campus
more than
1,000 hours
Community service hours completed
by Greeks during 2011-12
more than
$25,000
Money raised for charitable causes
by Greeks during 2011-12
In Brief...
● Brigette A. Bryant has been appointed
associate vice president for development,
overseeing major gifts, annual giving, planned
giving, corporate and foundation fundraising,
and advancement operations and services.
She came to Seton Hall from Tufts University,
where she was the senior director of development for the School of Arts and Sciences.
● Dan Kalmanson has been appointed associate
vice president for public relations and marketing,
heading up media relations, publications,
marketing, Web development and event planning.
He came to Seton Hall from the University
of New Haven, where he was associate vice
president for communications and public affairs.
● Carolyn Sattin Bajaj and Elaine Walker serve
as co-directors of the new Center for College
Readiness in the College of Education and
Human Services. Launched publicly in October
with a keynote address by New Jersey Commissioner of Education Christopher Cerf, the Center
aims to combat the challenges that low-income
minority and immigrant-origin students confront
during the college-choice process.
● The College of Nursing formalized a five-year
agreement with Montclair State University
that allows enrolled MSU students to earn a
baccalaureate degree at MSU and a master’s
degree from Seton Hall University in five years.
MSU biology majors who meet the admission
criteria can matriculate into Seton Hall’s clinical nurse leader program. The two universities
will also partner on research opportunities.
● In collaboration with the government of Kosovo
and Open Society, the School of Diplomacy
and International Relations is the first school
of its kind to offer programs training newly
appointed ambassadors of a foreign country.
The programs brought Kosovar civil society
leaders and ambassadors assigned to countries
across the globe to Washington, D.C., and
New York City for briefings with officials in
all sectors to learn international career skills.
● James Daly, a faculty member in secondary
education with a focus on social education,
coordinated two international conversations
between Seton Hall education majors and
students from the Lithuanian University of
Educational Sciences in the fall. Students
used Skype to discuss how history, political
structures and events in respective countries
would inform teaching and learning about
civics in K-12 education.
● For the sixth year, The Princeton Review
featured the Stillman School of Business
M.B.A. program in its listing of “The Best
Business Schools.” According to Robert Franek,
senior vice president-publisher, “We consider
Stillman one of the best institutions a student
could attend to earn an M.B.A..”
● The Freshman Studies program was
recognized recently with two national awards:
Outstanding Institutional Advising Program
Certificate of Merit from National Academic
Advising Association and Best Practices in
Student Retention Award from Consortium
for Student Retention Data Exchange.
● Laura Palmer, chair of the Department of
Professional Psychology and Family Therapy,
received the “Distinguished Researcher” award
from the New Jersey Psychological Association
in October 2012.
● Leadership Excellence magazine has ranked
the Stillman School’s Leadership Development Honors Program in the top 25 educational
leadership development programs, ahead
of programs at Cornell, William and Mary,
Georgetown, Case Western and Dartmouth.
● Spearheaded by the Stillman School’s
Leadership Development Honors Program,
Seton Hall University won the University
Challenge to raise money for the American
Heart Association’s Essex County Heart Walk
for the second consecutive year. Money
raised will help the fight against cardiovascular
diseases and stroke, and the University will
receive a matching gift from Investors Bank,
the challenge sponsor.
● Pat Linfante, assistant vice president of
public safety and security, was selected as
a finalist for “campus security director of the
year” by Campus Safety magazine.
● Judith T. Caruso, associate dean of administrative and business affairs at the College of
Nursing, was named a fellow of the American
College of Healthcare Executives, the nation’s
leading professional society for healthcare
leaders. Only 8,500 healthcare executives
hold this distinction.
9
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SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
HALLMARKS
SETON HALL CELEBRATES THE LEGACY OF MONSIGNOR OESTERREICHER,
THE BELOVED UNIVERSITY VISIONARY WHO CHANGED LIVES AROUND
60 Years of Engaging the World
THE WORLD WITH HIS DEDICATION TO JEWISH-CHRISTIAN DIALOGUE.
The Man Who
Built Bridges
Nostra Aetate
Monsignor Oesterreicher
Born a Jew in Moravia on Feb. 2, 1904, John
Jews was non-existent,” he told The Star-Ledger
In preparing for the
Oesterreicher was a medical student in Vienna
in 1992. At first, he said, Jews suspected him
Ecumenical Council
when he converted to Catholicism at 20, after
of a “missionary effort” while Catholics thought
called by Pope John XXIII, German Cardinal
reading Cardinal John Henry Newman’s essay,
him “crazy.” He persisted and was one of three
Augustin Bea was given the task of preparing
“Development of Christian Doctrine.” At his
group leaders who petitioned Rome to consider
draft documents on Christian ecumenism and
baptism, he added the middle name of Maria
Jewish-Catholic relations at the Second Vatican
Catholic-Jewish relations for consideration by
in honor of the Mother of Jesus. Days later,
Ecumenical Council (1962-1965). Promulgated
the Council Fathers.
he began studies for the priesthood and was
in 1965, the Declaration on the Relation of
ordained on July 17, 1927, in Saint Stephen’s
the Church to Non-Christian Religions (Nostra
along with Augustinian Gregory Baum and Bene-
Cathedral.
Aetate) has served as a basis for years of
dictine Leo Rudloff — both converts to Catholicism
interfaith dialogue and cooperation between
— to serve as consultors to the team of ecumenists
He was serving in a parish in 1933 when
Hitler’s rise to power prompted him to found
an institute that published a bimonthly journal
“John’s vision for the M.A. program was to
challenging Nazi anti-Semitism from a Catholic
look at the past history of Jewish-Christian
point of view. He also preached radio sermons
relations — the tragedies and the triumphs —
against Hitler’s racist policies, and was interro-
to see how we all draw on the roots of the
gated after the Nazis annexed Austria in 1938.
Biblical and Jewish heritage: their worship,
Fleeing to Paris, Father Oesterreicher contin-
ethics and moral order,” said Father Lawrence
ued his anti-Nazi broadcasts and writing until
Frizzell, who succeeded Monsignor Oesterreicher
Nazi troops invaded France. He fled to Spain
as director of the Institute.
and then to New York, arriving in November
Here, we explore the legacy of the man
who dedicated his life to promoting
mutual understanding between
Christian and Jewish communities.
Christians and Jews.
“This sets the stage where Jews and Chris-
1940. After teaching himself English, he served
tians, as people of faith, can have a common
as a parish priest before being invited to
voice on contemporary issues in the public
Seton Hall, where he founded the Institute of
square, where secular society wants to
Judaeo-Christian Studies on March 25, 1953.
squeeze us out,” he continued. “But the voice
The Institute began offering a Master of Arts
of religious people has to be heard and, when
in Jewish-Christian Studies degree in 1975.
Jews and Christians can stand together, it
“The relationship between Catholics and
has a greater impression on society at-large.”
The Institute, virtually alone among Catholic entities, issued a statement of solidarity with Israel during the Six-Day War of June 1967. The
institution’s commitment to the rights of the Jewish people and Israel
continues through lectures and writings through the next decades.
140 master’s degrees or certificates in Judaeo-Christian studies
have been conferred.
Cardinal Bea invited Monsignor Oesterreicher,
Photos courtesy of the Monsignor William Noé Field Archives & Special Collections Center
This year marks the 60th anniversary
of the founding of the Institute of
Judaeo-Christian Studies. A yearlong,
University-wide celebration of the
occasion, called “Building Bridges,”
will honor founder Monsignor John
M. Oesterreicher and will include
concerts, a film festival and a series
of lectures. More information on
Building Bridges events can be found
at www.shu.edu/go/building-bridges.
As befits the vision and international stature of founder John M.
Oesterreicher, the impact of the Institute of Judaeo-Christian Studies
has extended far beyond the Seton Hall campus. Since its founding
in 1953, the Institute has worked diligently to promote dialogue
between Christians and Jews by participating in forums in the United
States and overseas, and by implementing educational programs
that cultivate better understanding through the study of history and
commonly held traditions.
who ultimately proposed a momentous document
More than 350 parochial and public-school teachers of Holocaust
studies have taken courses at Seton Hall with the assistance of the
Sister Rose Thering Fund for Education in Jewish-Christian Studies
since its founding in 1993.
that affirmed the Church’s respect and the common
Building on work begun two decades earlier, Sister Rose Thering,
an associate at the Institute from 1968-1973, and Luna Kaufman,
a survivor of the Nazi work camps, served on the commission that
drafted the 1994 state law mandating Holocaust and genocide
studies in New Jersey schools.
ground it shares with Jews, Muslims and people
of other religions.
University of California at Berkeley historian
John Connelly credits Monsignor Oesterreicher
with adept political maneuvering that countered
attempts to dilute the section dealing with Jews.
Approved by the world’s Catholic bishops and
promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1965, Nostra Aetate
(“In Our Time”) was a landmark document. For the
first time, a Council condemned anti-Semitism
and declared that all Jews living then or in later
generations cannot be blamed for Christ’s death.
Monsignor Oesterreicher was “the first one
who ought to be mentioned in regard to the
Father Frizzell and Rabbi Asher Finkel, professor of Judaeo-Christian
studies since 1975, have presented many lectures and published
widely. For example, 12 lectures from Ontario to Alabama addressed
Mel Gibson’s controversial 2004 film, “Passion of the Christ.” Father
Frizzell represented the Institute at the annual meeting of the International Conference of Christians and Jews in Austria in 2006 and
in Poland in 2011; he lectured at Vatican-Jewish meeting in Paris
in February 2011.
A video about Monsignor Oesterreicher’s life was produced by students
in the Department of Communications and the Arts for the 60th
anniversary of the Institute.
text of Nostra Aetate,” wrote Cardinal Johannes
Willebrands, the late president of the Pontifical
Council for Promoting Christian Unity.
| AL FRANK
The Institute of Judaeo-Christian
Studies Over Time
10
1953
1961
1965
1969
1975
1987
1993
The Institute of Judaeo-Christian Studies
founded on March 25, 1953
Monsignor Oesterreicher named a
consultor in preparing texts for the
Vatican Council II, 1961-1965
Nostra Aetate promulgated by
Pope Paul VI in October 1965
Menorah Institute began in July 1969
with annual sessions until 1972
Master of Arts in Jewish-Christian
Studies program founded in 1975
Monsignor Oesterreicher
Endowment established in 1987
Monsignor Oesterreicher died on
April 18, 1993
H. Suzanne Jobert’s financial support
of the Institute’s work began in 1953
Father Lawrence Frizzell, an associate since
1974, named director of the Institute
2008
Sister Rose Thering Fund for Education
in Jewish-Christian Studies established
in 1993
Father Frizzell named a consultor to the
Commission for Religious Relations with
the Jews in the Pontifical Council for
Promoting Christian Unity, 2008 to 2013
11
POSSIBILITIES |
MIKE CULLITY
the
Entertainer
WHETHER SHE’S SINGING THE NATIONAL ANTHEM AT A KNICKS GAME OR INTERNING
FOR THE NEW YORK METS, ANNA NEGRÓN ’13 PUTS HER HEART INTO HER PERFORMANCE.
A star on the hardwood: Negrón
has kicked off basketball games
with the national anthem for both
the Pirates (facing page) and the
New York Knicks (above).
12
Photo by Chuck Moss
A
s she approaches graduation, Anna Negrón ’13 envisions herself on a big stage.
In one scenario she’s an executive for a professional sports franchise, possibly her
beloved New York Mets. In another, she’s Jerry Maguire in heels, representing
high-profile athletes as a sports agent. And in still another, she’s recording albums
and touring the country as a singing star, à la Christina Aguilera or Céline Dion.
Each possibility appears within reach for the 22-year-old business major concentrating
in sport management. Over four years at Seton Hall she has served in four New York
City internships, including one with the Mets and another with the New York Knicks.
She has showcased her talent singing the national anthem at prominent sporting events
and performed with The Sapphires, Seton Hall’s dance team. She’s a regular in New
Jersey scholarship pageants and is preparing for her third run at the Miss New Jersey
crown in June.
What’s more, Negrón carries a full course load while working two part-time jobs
to help finance her education. “She’s extremely determined,” says Samantha Toth ’12,
a former roommate. “She’s the type of person who will set goals for herself and do
anything to accomplish those goals.”
Negrón learned the value of hard work growing up in Vineland, N.J., where her
parents operate an auto repair shop. “Coming from a town that had one of the highest
high-school dropout rates among Hispanics and one of the highest teen-pregnancy
rates among Hispanics, it was very important to me to defy all of those stereotypes,”
says Negrón, who is of Puerto Rican descent. “I knew I was better than that. Growing
up, my mother always pushed me to be the best that I could be.”
Negrón played youth basketball and softball, took dance classes and sang in school
and church choirs. Not long after starting voice lessons in elementary school, she
performed Mariah Carey’s “Hero” for a local television audience.
“I would sit and watch games with my family and see the national anthem, and
I can remember looking at my mom and saying, ‘I want to do that,’ ” Negrón says.
Her voice coach, Sal Dupree, recalls his longtime student’s early enthusiasm. “What
separated Anna from a lot of kids is that she thrived on learning,” he says.
While developing as a vocalist, Negrón began to realize the limits of her athleticism.
Still, her work from the sidelines as a student manager of three Sacred Heart High
School athletic squads fueled her interest in a sports career.
When she began considering colleges, a guidance counselor
suggested Seton Hall, which was among the first universities
to establish a business degree program in sport management.
Offered through the Stillman School of Business, the program
requires at least two internships. In addition to working in
media relations for the Mets and Knicks, Negrón has interned
with a New York public-relations firm and IMG, the worldwide
sport and entertainment management conglomerate.
While aspiring to work in professional sports, Negrón
dreams about how far her voice might take her. She began
singing “The Star-Spangled Banner” at high-school sporting
events and sang it before a Seton Hall women’s soccer game as
a freshman. That exposure led to performances at Seton Hall
basketball games, and she’s since scored gigs at the 2012
BIG EAST Conference men’s basketball championship game
and with the Knicks, Philadelphia 76ers and Brooklyn Nets.
Although she’s yet to qualify for “American Idol” in three tries,
her voice coach believes her voice offers great promise. “With the
instrument that she has, she will never be out of work,” Dupree says.
Competing in New Jersey scholarship pageants — she is the
reigning Miss South Shore Area — Negrón has gained a platform
to speak about the dangers of drunken driving, an issue close
to her heart since an intoxicated motorist struck and killed her
18-year-old friend Joshua Moren in a 2008 traffic accident.
Her devotion to the cause suggests there’s an altruistic
motive behind her taste for the limelight. “Being a role model
is very important to me,” Negrón says. “I want to inspire people,
share my experiences with them, and show them that nothing
is ever too far-fetched if you’re willing to put in the work.” ■
Mike Cullity is a reporter for the New Hampshire Union Leader and
a freelance writer.
13
13
ROA M I N G T H E H A L L |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
JAMES ERIK ABELS
Photo by Milan Stanic
T
Giving Physics
a Good Name
J O S E L O P E Z D O E S M O R E T H A N M A K E A DVA N C E S I N T H E N E W LY
E M E R G I N G F I E L D O F M I C RO P L A S M A S, H E M A K E S A S O M E T I M E S
I N T I M I DAT I N G S U B J E C T AC C E S S I B L E F O R S T U D E N T S.
14
here’s a bolt of pure lightning that plays music in
the basement of McNulty Hall.
At least, it looks like lightning. It pulses, and music plays
out of the thin air above it. Jose Lopez, the newest addition to
Seton Hall’s Department of Physics, shows visitors his plasma
speaker with a smile. The 34-year-old assistant professor of
physics likes a good attention-grabber.
“In physics, we have very bad PR. We make it seem that
it’s not accessible,” he says.
In a field forever dominated by Albert Einstein’s loopy
personal style, Lopez is an unexpected twist on the age-old
vision of a brainy physicist. The chatty Newark native is warm,
amiable and plainspoken. And yet, one of the 20 biggest brains
in the state, according to Inside Jersey magazine, is also
an expert in a little-known, but potentially up-and-coming
field of study called microplasmas.
Lopez creates these tiny plasma reactions in order to
assemble chemicals as if they were made of Lego blocks.
That’s not as crazy as it sounds. Most people know there
are three states of matter: solid, liquid and gas. Each is
defined by the density and arrangement of the atoms within
it. Plasma is a fourth state that occurs when gases destabilize.
That means their atoms break up into a mixture of charged
ions and electrons.
Once free, these ions and electrons can be recombined
into something new. Lopez studies ways to control them.
“That’s the whole thing,” says Alfred Freilich, a longtime
Lopez collaborator who joined Seton Hall with him in 2011
as a visiting research professor. It’s hard to reliably control
plasma. It’s hot — the sun and stars are made of it. And atoms
like stability. On Earth, they don’t shift to plasma easily.
Generally, a vacuum is needed to coax them. They shift to
it more easily in miniature. At scales of a millimeter or less,
chemical elements will become plasma in the open air and
at a temperature cool enough to touch.
As a result, there may be a lot of ways to put these tiny
plasmas to work. Lopez and Freilich look for them.
For instance, Degrémont Technologies uses their research
to increase the amount of oxygen it can turn into ozone inside
of school bus-sized microplasma reactors. Municipalities
and other groups buy the reactors so they can kill bacteria
with ozone rather than chlorine at their water-treatment
plants. The ozone is produced on-site because it breaks
down soon after it’s created.
The oxygen alchemy is cool, but Lopez uses the reactors
to connect more than just electrons and ions.
He also uses them to connect with people. By forcing a lot
of tiny oxygen plasmas to create ozone, the reactors remind
people that physics doesn’t just explain how the universe
works. It also offers keys for controlling it.
So, when Degrémont asked for help on its microplasma
reactors in 2005, Lopez opted to make the field a long-term
focus. At the time, he was joining the physics faculty at his
alma mater, Saint Peter’s University in Jersey City, N.J.
That found the newly minted academic looking for a way
to connect with students directly.
Lopez already knew something about drawing students
into science. Kurt Becker, his doctoral adviser at the Stevens
Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J., noticed that shortly
after Lopez arrived in 2000. Becker often opened his lab to
local high school and college students looking for hands-on
research experience. They all flocked to Lopez.
“It was almost his natural instinct to take them under
his wing,” says Becker.
That’s not surprising. By then, Lopez had been teaching
science for years — he tutored the entire women’s varsity
basketball team in math and science while a sophomore
at Saint Peter’s.
But he did learn some new tricks under Becker, now the
associate provost for research and technology initiatives
at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University. Becker
treated doctoral students like colleagues, not employees.
He encouraged them to explore their own interests, and
tried to get them whatever they needed to do it.
“If someone had a good idea, my attitude was: Go try it
out,” he says.
Becker’s stance had a long-term effect on Lopez. Nothing
is out of reach. Last spring, he applied the theory to one of
his first courses at Seton Hall. Rather than limiting his class
on waves and oscillations to the university’s labs, he added a
set of online video lectures from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
The result really stood out to junior Stacie Ballou. The
lectures gave her a first-hand look at the type of experiments
normally confined to big research universities. “It was a
different experience,” she says.
For Lopez, that was the point. Students aren’t unlike the
chemicals he assembles in microplasma.
They’re ready to become something new — if you can
connect with them. ■
James Erik Abels, J.D. ’03 is a New York City-based writer and the founder
of an Internet software start-up.
15
It
Takes
a
Village
MARY ANN CHRISTOPHER, M.S.N. ’83,
CEO OF THE VISITING NURSE SER VICE OF
NEW YORK, HAS DEDICATED HER CAREER TO
EXPANDING COMMUNITY-BASED HEALTH CARE.
SHE CREDITS THE COLLEGE OF NURSING
WITH IGNITING HER PASSION FOR FOCUSING
ATTENTION ON SOCIETY’S MOST VULNERABLE.
16
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
BOB GILBERT
F
or Mary Ann Christopher, the nursing profession is part science and
part art, but mostly a ministry.
President and chief executive officer of the Visiting Nurse Service of New
York (VNSNY), the nation’s largest not-for-profit home health-care organization,
Christopher and her organization provide a medical safety net for hundreds
of thousands of the most vulnerable.
When Superstorm Sandy ravaged the metropolitan area, VNSNY went to
work in New York’s five boroughs immediately after the storm. With an interprofessional VNSNY team, Christopher set up a command post in the Saint
Francis de Sales School in Rockaway, N.Y. — the team sitting at kindergarten
desks to organize assistance.
“We went door to door and found folks who couldn’t come down,” Christopher
says. With pharmaceutical supplies airlifted and driven in, VNSNY distributed
prescription refills and set up mini-clinics in various neighborhoods that had
been devastated by flooding.
The experience shows the power of community-based health care in physical,
spiritual and emotional terms, she says, noting that her constant thought during
the response to the storm was “how blessed you are to be a health-care provider.”
Christopher’s belief in the transcendence of the nursing occupation began
in childhood, when as a young girl she watched her mother, the late Mary Lee,
preparing to leave for work in her white uniform. Her mother, trained at
the Holy Name School of Nursing in Teaneck, N.J., “always talked with great
reverence about being a nurse,” Christopher recalls.
Photos courtesy of VNSNY
P RO F I L E |
program aims to address the state’s
The belief expanded with Christopher’s
extreme shortage of nurses with
undergraduate nursing training at
graduate credentials who are preFairfield University and came into full
pared to teach, Hansell says.
recognition as a graduate student at
Addressing a different type of
Seton Hall’s College of Nursing, where
gap — community-based care for the
she specialized in gerontology and met
elderly — was the reason Christopher
“an extraordinary set of mentors.”
joined the Visiting Nurse Association
The late Mary Jo Namerow, M.S.N. ’78,
Health Group in Red Bank, N.J., having
a distinguished nursing scholar who
been recruited in 1985 to run a federal
taught in the Gerontological Nurse Pracpilot program to find young mothers on
titioner program, instilled in Christopher
welfare to take care of the chronically
a passion for finding ways to help
ill and elderly. A stunning success, it
society’s most marginalized people.
became the platform for the Medicaid
“What I learned from her,” Christopher
Mary Ann Christopher embodies servant
waiver program, a federal-state effort
says, “was to exquisitely tell the story
leadership as she works to find healthcare
to fund medical and long-term services
of our patients. By that means, there
solutions for communities in need.
for low-income aged, blind or disabled
is no public policy we can’t influence.”
individuals, and families with children.
Dr. Leona Kleinman, also deceased, underscored
Over the years, Christopher’s connection to Seton Hall
what servant leadership is, she says, with a focus on
has become only stronger. She became a member of the
gerontology and the disabled. Fran Bowers, Christopher’s
School of Nursing’s advisory board in 2000, and in 2010
clinical instructor, worked alongside her in the Vailsburg
joined Seton Hall’s Board of Regents.
section of Newark. “She taught me that we learn as
Another University connection is her partnership with
much from our patients as we do from our training.”
Dr. Kenneth W. Faistl ’71, a family medical practitioner
But it is Phyllis Shanley Hansell, today dean of the College
based in Colts Neck, who was her mentor and preceptor
of Nursing, who has been the longest-lasting influence.
during her nurse practitioner training.
Christopher credits Hansell, her professor in the nurse
Twenty years later, the doctor — certified also in geriatrics
practitioner master’s program, with teaching her “how to
and addiction medicine — saw Christopher at a reception.
blend the intellectual rigor of science with a mindfulness
“And we got to talking about how we could work together
about the care of patients and a passionate belief in the
on community health solutions for people outside the safety
sanctity of the nursing profession.”
net, such as the uninsured or underinsured,” Faistl says.
For her part, Hansell remembers a stellar student who
“And this began with the realization on my part that the
was passionate about nursing. “Mary Ann had an inner
Visiting Nurse Association she was heading was providing
drive to make a difference for the elderly. She was extremely
care to a lot of my patients.” He was soon on her board.
bright and scientific, yet very soft at the same time.”
Another milestone in Christopher’s career was a federal
It’s no wonder, then, that the two began to work together,
grant to build the Asbury Park Healthcare Center and,
first in nursing circles and then over Christopher’s 29-year
eventually, similar community healthcare facilities in Red
career at Visiting Nurse Association of Central Jersey, where
Bank and Keyport, N.J. “She’s one of those kinds of people
as CEO for a decade she expanded a two-county provider
who want to make things better in the world,” Faistl says.
into a statewide organization. She developed services
“My career has very much followed a servant-leader
such as home health care, hospice care, community-based
model, a Catholic educational model, with the lens of being
prevention and outreach initiatives, clinics for the poor,
a ministry,” Christopher says. “Frankly, we’re involved in some
and school-based health care.
of the most sacred moments of our patients’ lives, as well
The Hansell-Christopher team has scored a number of
as some of the most sacred moments in the community.” ■
New Jersey nursing firsts, most recently winning a Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation grant of about $5 million to
support the annual study of 10 doctoral students at Seton
Bob Gilbert is a writer based in Connecticut.
Hall, the dean says. The New Jersey Nursing Initiative
17
F E AT U R E |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
BOB GILBERT
SUPERSTORM SANDY DEVASTATED
FAMILIES — AND WHOLE COMMUNITIES —
THROUGHOUT THE METROPOLITAN AREA.
MANY IN THE SETON HALL COMMUNITY
RUSHED TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE.
After
the Storm
18
19
F E AT U R E |
AFTER THE STORM:
Altruism’s
Reward
Y
with Dalmacy on a campus awareness program on the
plight of Haitians after the earthquake that year.
Dalmacy, 45, left Haiti at age 13 to come to the United
States, where she became a citizen and prospered. She
earned high school, undergraduate and M.B.A. degrees, and
worked for a while at the nonprofit aid organization Oraiso,
where she was involved in relief work for Haiti.
By 2000, she had landed a prestigious job at Morgan
veline Dalmacy has had a lot of experience organizing
Stanley’s private banking practice in New York. But the
humanitarian aid. In 2007, she helped send a container
tug of her husband’s work as a physician and politician
ship loaded with 1,500 boxes of clothes, toys, sewing
in Haiti — he ran for president in 2010 — in combination
machines, medical equipment and other supplies to her
with her own desire to help her native country, led Dalmacy
native Haiti following the twin disasters of Hurricane Noel
to the School of Diplomacy and International Relations.
and a devastating earthquake.*
She now is a few credits away from a master’s degree
Never did the diplomacy graduate student think she’d
be on the receiving end of such assistance — especially
not from her professors and counselors at the Whitehead
School of Diplomacy and International Relations.
All of which may simply prove the old adage that “what
with specializations in global health and human security,
and international economics and development.
Thanks to Superstorm Sandy, however, Dalmacy’s graduation
will be later than expected. In fact, not much has been expected.
Her first port in the storm was a friend’s house in New York,
goes around comes around,” she says, relating what has
“who was willing to take us in,” she says. But, realizing she
befallen her family since the effects of Superstorm Sandy
needed to be independent, Dalmacy booked a room at a
hit her Coney Island, N.Y., home.
New Jersey hotel “that was the only place I could find.”
On Oct. 28, the day before the storm arrived, Dalmacy was
She was driven by fear that there would “be no food,
preoccupied caring for her daughter Anabelle, 13 months
water or milk for my baby.” And that, she says, is exactly
old at the time. Also at home was her 21-year-old daughter,
what happened. Worse, at the hotel, “we did not have power
Tatiana, an undergraduate at Kennesaw State University.
or water for two days. It was horrible.”
Her husband, Dr. Kesler Dalmacy, was away in Haiti.
Yveline Dalmacy was unaware that a 14-foot tidal surge
and 80-mile-an-hour winds were hours away from her front
door, which she says is “about 10 steps from the ocean.”
She received a phone call from a friend, asking: “Did
you evacuate?”
Dalmacy was stunned by the question, saying she “had
no idea there was an evacuation in effect.” She and her older
The help from Seton Hall was a pleasant
surprise.
“They collected food, clothing — mostly
thing I knew the school was holding a drive
for me. I don’t know how I would have
gotten through without their support.”
for the baby — diapers, kitchen utensils
Sanjamino offers a simple explanation:
Meanwhile, deadlines were looming for a major paper.
Dalmacy was leading a nomadic
and other items. They even provided me
“We have a very strong sense of commu-
So, Dalmacy managed to get a message to Professor Martin
existence, moving from friends’ homes
with a small monetary donation.” Dalmacy
nity at the School of Diplomacy and
Edwards that she was “going to be late in getting it done.”
to motels and back. She was also dealing
credits Halpin for proving a “huge, huge
International Relations and we support
That’s when Halpin and others at the school rallied to
with the Federal Emergency Management
support” as her liaison with the school’s
each other in difficult times.”
begin a drive to help the family. What was needed most were
Agency and insurance companies, and
group. All her professors pitched in, Dalmacy
warm clothes for Anabelle; they immediately started to pile
coming to grips with her family’s losses
says, with some sending her books
feels lucky to be both alive and connected
up in Halpin’s office until Dalmacy was able to collect them.
after 22 years in their home.
“because I lost my library, which included
to the South Orange campus.
How bad was the devastation? “We had
Today, although still homeless, Dalmacy
books I’d been collecting since high school.”
“I’ve always been proud to be a Seton
Something else arrived, too: a note from
Hall student. But I did not realize how
daughter quickly gathered a few odd items, then fled by car
just redone the kitchen,” Dalmacy says.
with Anabelle through their nearly vacant neighborhood.
“When I returned, I found my refrigerator
Ursula Sanjamino, one of the school’s two
lucky I was to be a part of this community
until this disaster struck.”
“I didn’t even take time to pack because of a mother’s
sitting on top of the kitchen counter.
associate deans. It read, in part, “Just
fear that the water would engulf us,” she says. Behind
Everything was gone, swept away by close
a few items from my daughters and me
them, most of their possessions would be destroyed by
to six feet of water. It was the most devas-
for your little one. … Continue to believe
Dalmacy had this to say: “The thing I
the mass of water. It was so bad that a neighbor two
tating feeling you can ever go through.”
things will get better. They will. Stay safe
want people to take away from my story
and strong.”
is that whenever you have a chance to do
doors down drowned, she says.
“Yveline is quite a remarkable student,” says Elizabeth
Halpin, assistant dean of external affairs for the School of
Diplomacy and International Relations. In 2010 she worked
In Sandy’s Wake: (previous spread) Scenes of
destruction in New Jersey’s shore communities.
Photos by Bill Blanchard and Billy Seeliger. (above and left)
Yveline Dalmacy and her family near their Coney
Island home. Photos by Chuck Moss.
“When I read that, it brought tears to my
Asked to sum up her recent experience,
good, do good, because although altruism
eyes,” says Dalmacy. “I had no idea that my
is its own reward, you never know when
school was going to step up, but the next
it will come back to you.”
* Because of a bureaucratic snarl in Port-au-Prince, the aid to Haiti in 2007 never got through,
and sat for a year in the harbor before being sent back.
20
21
F E AT U R E |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
AFTER THE STORM:
Tweets and posts
Social media played a key communications role in Sandy’s aftermath.
Michael Hyland, director of Web and digital communications, answered
queries and stemmed rumors on Facebook and Twitter.
From the emergency response center in Walsh Library, Hyland
sent out messages on social media that mirrored the Pirate Alerts
and responded in real time to Twitter and Facebook inquiries —
which amounted to about two dozen each day.
“Parents just wanted to talk, to know that everyone was OK and
that power was still on,” he says. Students with concerns about driving
in were relieved to find that classes had been canceled. Others were
glad to hear that registration deadlines would be extended.
Responding to Disaster
uperstorm Sandy caused more than 30 deaths
in New Jersey and at least $29.4 billion in damage,
according to official reports. But the storm’s
destructive path left the campus relatively unscathed and
fully functional, which allowed the Seton Hall community
to quickly reach out to those in need.
S
On-site cleanup
Here are some of the ways Seton Hall responded:
Division of Volunteer Efforts
“Any time there’s a local or national disaster, Seton Hall responds,”
says Michelle Peterson, director of the Division of Volunteer Efforts
(DOVE). After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the University sponsored
23 New Orleans university students who began to call Seton Hall
home that fall. “When this hit, people immediately started to ask
how Seton Hall would respond.”
The answer was impressive, with DOVE coordinating donations
(totaling $10,166.50) on the school’s website and collecting clothing
and food at its offices and at 15 drop-boxes around campus.
The DOVE offices in Boland Hall repeatedly filled up “to the
point where we couldn’t even move around,” says Peterson. That’s
when vans would deliver the goods to Catholic Charities, Newark,
to replenish food pantries and create new distribution mechanisms
where pantries had been destroyed.
Stuff the Truck: Stillman students organized a food drive to help the Community
FoodBank of New Jersey. Photo by Milan Stanic.
22
89.5 FM WSOU
Emergency Services
The student-run radio station raised $9,535 for Superstorm Sandy
relief efforts, surpassing the station’s goal of $8,950, during an
18-hour radio-athon held on Nov. 30. Donations from 111 listeners
were equally distributed between the Hurricane Sandy New Jersey
Relief Fund and the Empire State Relief Fund.
Mark Maben, WSOU’s general manager, says the radio-athon
“was very much a student-driven initiative.”
“During the storm, we had 13 students who volunteered essentially
to lock themselves into the station for a 48-hour period — and they
worked in shifts,” Maben explains. He said the students didn’t venture
outdoors with microphones, yet “filled the gap when it came to local
coverage.” The list of announcements included news reports, lists of
what was closed, interviews with local, state and Red Cross officials
and updates from the University’s Emergency Management staff.
Thomas E. Giordano’s 20-person emergency response team was
prepared for the storm. Giordano, assistant director for emergency
management, ensures that essential services — IT, facilities, housing
and health services — are maintained at all times.
At the time Sandy hit, more than 100 students, faculty and staff
had gone through a 20-hour training program run by the federal
government called CERT (Community Emergency Response Team).
The training paid off.
Though the University never lost power, surrounding towns did.
Giordano set up an emergency operations center within Walsh Library,
where he repeatedly met with South Orange officials. Giordano lived
in the center for two days, sleeping on a cot. A small number of
South Orange residents needed a place to sleep and others needed
the use of power outlets, mostly to recharge cellphones.
“The biggest single problem you have in an emergency is
communication,” Giordano says. The University’s Pirate Alert system
sends out messages via texts, emails, cell lines and land lines.
Housing and Residence Life
When Tara Hart, director of Housing and Residence Life, and her
staff realized the school had not lost power, and that even Internet
and cable television service were working, her team sent out a Pirate
Alert query asking: “Are you disposed to help a fellow Pirate in need?”
Resident students were asked to host stranded or commuter students
unable to get gasoline. Of the nearly 1,000 students who stayed
on campus while the University was closed, 141 quickly opened
their doors, saying, as Hart puts it, “Yep, come crash on my floor.”
Hart’s team facilitated the influx of 66 students, the last of whom
stayed for two-and-a-half weeks. To combat boredom, residence hall
leaders staged entertainment and get-togethers, including movie
nights, game nights, parties and pingpong tournaments. “It was a
testament to student leadership,” Hart says. “We’re at our best when
emergency situations arise.”
Christopher O’Brien, director of clinical education for the School of
Health and Medical Sciences’ department of athletic training, led
eight students and two faculty members to Staten Island to clear
debris. O’Brien has a history of helping out after hurricane disasters
that he says started after watching the devastation of Katrina on TV.
Staten Island native Dr. Thomas Bottiglieri suggested that O’Brien
and his team work with the relief agency Guyon Rescue. Two-anda-half weeks after the storm, the group arrived at what looked like
a war zone in Oakwood Beach, O’Brien says, and filled two large
municipal dump trucks with debris. The sight that most impressed
him was a staircase rising from a slab of concrete where someone
had put an American flag at the top of the stairs. ■
Bob Gilbert is a writer based in Connecticut.
Athletics
The Department of Athletics collected blankets, clothes, shoes,
cleaning supplies and other provisions and took them to local shelters
in Pirate vans, says Matthew Sweeney, assistant athletics director of
communications.
Pirates also shared their basketball courts with teams needing a
place to practice because their facilities had been damaged by the
storm. Among these were teams from Saint Peter’s College in Jersey
City, Wagner College on Staten Island, and Monmouth University in
West Long Branch, N.J.
“In moments of crisis or a natural disaster, it’s important to lend
a hand wherever we can help,” explains men’s basketball head
coach Kevin Willard.
Staten Island Cleanup: Left to right: Monika Young, athletic training student; Meena
Abdelkodoos, staff volunteer; Christopher O’Brien, assistant dean, Division of Health Sciences,
SHMS; Kim Small, athletic training student; Josie Tran, athletic training student; Maesoon Deeb,
athletic training student; Dawn Maffucci, athletic training faculty; Rachel Kelly, athletic training
student; Nick Santos, athletic training student; Ojirese Momoh, athletic training student.
Photo by Christopher O’Brien.
23
F E AT U R E |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
I
Believe
This
A CLOSE-UP LOOK AT OUR NEWEST PIRATES, THE HISTORIC CLASS OF 2016
C
ollectively, the 1,455 students entering Seton
Hall as freshmen last September outpaced
previous groups in both class size and academic
preparation. Hailing from 10 foreign countries,
including Saudi Arabia, South Korea and the Ivory
Coast, our first-year students also include a 16-yearold star pupil from Illinois and a nursing student
involved in the sport of curling.
For 10 years, incoming freshmen have participated
in The Summer Reading Program, which requires
them to read a book chosen to spark reflection and
discussion in their introductory courses. Students are
also encouraged to participate in a complementary
essay contest.
This year, readings were based on the radio series
“This I Believe,” originally launched in the 1950s
by the famed journalist Edward R. Murrow, in which
citizens shared their personal beliefs in an essay of
600 words or less that they read over the air. The fundamental idea was that, in a time of uncertainty and
discord, hearing one person’s views about life could
help others formulate their own answers to critical
questions. National Public Radio revived the program
in 2005, and it currently airs on Sirius XM Radio.
To provide a more detailed look at the Class
of 2016, we have included a sampling of the “This
I Believe” essays they submitted. These personal
statements depict thoughtful, optimistic, hardworking young men and women — the kind of
student Seton Hall has a long history of attracting.
It is one of my personal beliefs to always stop at the
lemonade stand because it is a unique representation
of the human spirit.
I have been receiving much praise as a recent high school graduate, more than I think is
fair, quite honestly, for a feat accomplished by millions. Tight hugs and teary-eyed “Congratulations” have become a common occurrence to me, and I suppose I deserve them.
I worked very hard. I graduated 10th in my class; I was a triathlete and
president of my school’s environmental club and National Honor Society.
I leave for college soon, and as I look on my future with high hopes,
I realize I’m not the only one. My family is exceedingly proud of me. They
will support me in all of my goals, and they will not be satisfied until I am.
They believe I can achieve some level of greatness they missed out on.
I understand this belief is applied to all parents: that their child will
achieve greater things than they did. That’s all we want for our youth;
I know because that’s what I already wish for my future children.
We see possibility in our children we can no longer find in ourselves. Children can
believe in almost anything imaginable, from monsters beneath the bed to world peace.
We all have it at some point: the hope that you can one day solve the problems of
the world. We see this hope in all children. It’s instinctive, natural. The problem is that
the more we see of the world we live in, we realize how difficult the task truly is. And we
gradually lose faith over time.
But when you stop at a lemonade stand, you are encouraging that hope and fostering the
dream still present in that child. You are inspiring that child to persevere and to not give up.
Maybe you have tried the childlike endeavor that is a lemonade stand. Surely you
remember waiting patiently for any living person to come by and purchase your lemonade
for a mere 25 cents a cup.
Very few came. But remember when they did? Do you remember the smiles you
enjoyed and the generous tip you got? Or, if you have practiced my belief once or twice
as an adult, do you remember the unforgettable smiles on those young faces?
I believe in always stopping at the lemonade stand because it keeps dreams alive. Dreams
are one of the few propensities of the human spirit. We are not meant to skim pools,
or watch movies or become accountants. We are meant to love and dream and investigate.
The human spirit can be found in the amateur sale of sweetened drinks. We must
support it. It is our destiny. This I believe.
B Y T ROY B A L O G
24
CLASS STATS
CLASS OF 2016
RESIDENCE STATUS
Commuter
371
ACADEMIC PROFILE
37%
1102
TOP MOST REPORTED RELIGIONS
(among students reporting their religion)
Students in the top-10 percent of their high school class
(among students reporting high school rank)
On-campus
1084
SAT Average
71%
Roman Catholic
4%
3%
3%
Baptist
Hindu
Muslim
25
F E AT U R E |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
I believe in the self-made man.
I believe in the man — or woman — who starts from nothing and works for
what he or she has — men and women who have not come from wealth, yet
have persevered and achieved their goals.
This idea is built upon working hard and being determined to achieve goals.
These people do not cower, blaming others for their failures, and they do not
allow excuses to conceal their defeats. Individuals such as Barack Obama, Bill
Gates, Oprah Winfrey, and J.K Rowling all started from humble beginnings.
However, they refused to allow their environments and surroundings to predetermine
their destinations. These people are resilient and have attained success while overcoming
impediments and failures.
My father, Steven, is a self-made man. His father passed away when he was 6 years old,
and he came from a family that lived in 13 different houses before finding an affordable
home in Jersey City, N.J.
My father earned a baseball scholarship and was the first in his family to graduate from
college. He has overcome much adversity in life, eventually achieving success in running an
Allstate Insurance agency that provided life’s basics for his family. He is the hardest-working
person I have ever known and his will to succeed is a quality I attempt to emulate.
Despite the fact that I have come from an influential family, my experience with volleyball
has instilled in me a profound sense of achieving a goal when you begin with nothing.
My sophomore year, I decided to try out for volleyball, even though I possessed no
volleyball experience. Needless to say, I got cut from the team.
Yet I refuse to allow failures define me. I became the team manager and over the summer I attended camps. Then I joined a club team the following winter. During the subsequent
season, I made junior varsity, was named captain of that team, and then played varsity my
senior year. This experience demonstrated that one does not be need to be given anything
to receive what he or she desires. Achievement comes from realizing goals and working
hard to achieve them, regardless of how much talent or money you begin with.
An individual who comes from modest means and achieves goals regardless is
admirable. Failures are inevitable in life, yet moving forward from these failures is something
that ultimately defines who people are.
Self-made people do not become complacent with their place in society and they work
hard to succeed. These people should be admired. I believe in their fortitude to succeed.
American Indian or Alaskan Native
Asian
Female
804
26
BY BRITTNEY LITTLE
CLASS OF 2016
CLASS OF 2016
ENROLLMENT BY COLLEGE
<1%
Arts & Sciences
998
Business
178
Diplomacy
74
Education
62
9%
Male
Black or African-American
10%
651
Hispanic/Latino
18%
White
In other words, I believe you need to give everyone and everything a chance because
everybody is created equal. As Thomas Jefferson wrote, “We hold these truths to be selfevident: that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
Ants are one of the world’s smallest creatures, and to many, one of the most insignificant.
Most people don’t care if they step on an ant.
One can think of these ants as modern-day minorities: African-Americans, followers of
the Jewish and Muslim faiths, Asians or Hispanics. The only thing that makes these people
minorities in the United States is that they have a smaller population in a given location.
Racism and religious bigotry disgust me. I am not Muslim, but my friend Zeynepp is, and
she told me about being discriminated against for wearing her hijab. So this past summer,
my best friend Maria and I tried an experiment. We pinned scarves around our
heads and went to the mall in our town. Normally, kiosk vendors try to get us to
buy things and ask us to sample snacks. Clerks usually ask us if we need help,
tell us about sales, and smile at us. Not that day.
Vendors, clerks and other shoppers wouldn’t look at us. They didn’t talk
to us. They acted like we didn’t exist. They didn’t want to be caught staring
at us, so they didn’t look at all. In one store, a girl (who looked to be about
4 years old) asked her mom if my friend and I were terrorists. She wasn’t
trying to be mean. I don’t think she grasped the idea of prejudice.
However, her mother’s response is one I cannot forgive or forget. The mother hushed
her child, glared at me, took her daughter by the hand and led her out of the store. Just
like that, a mother taught her little girl that being Muslim was evil. It didn’t matter that I was
a nice person. All that mattered was that I looked different. That little girl may grow up and
teach her children the same thing.
This experiment was like a slap in the face for me. It lasted only a few hours; I can’t
begin to imagine how much prejudice Muslim girls go through every day.
I believe God made every human being equal, no matter what they look like or how they
worship. Hateful feelings are very much present in this day and age, even though many like
to think otherwise. I believe it will be up to my generation to work to end racism in American
society and persistently defend the inherent rights of every human being.
B Y R YA N U L R I C H
RACE/ETHNICITY
GENDER
I believe in not stepping on a single ant.
53%
Two or more races
4%
Nursing
Unknown
6%
Theology
136
HIGH SCHOOL TYPE
Catholic
353
Private: 42
Other: 11
Public
1041
Foreign: 8
7
27
F E AT U R E |
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
I believe that trying to understand the world around
us is what gives us meaning in life.
People constantly move about and rush to get things done, but not everyone stops and
thinks, “Why am I doing this?”
About four years ago, I stopped and pondered this existential question. I had gone
through my 14 years of life existing, but I was not living. By living I mean taking in what is
happening around you and knowing why. That short question — why? — is what I believe
to be the biggest part of life.
My questioning has led me down the road of introspection and analysis of my life.
It began when I was a high-school freshman. Going year after year doing similar things
and realizing that the same routine is what composes the rest of life, I thought, “What’s
the point of it all?”
We wake up, take care of day-to-day business, sleep and repeat. After
coming to this realization, I concluded that there really isn’t anything else.
This is our reality; this is what we live for. It’s interesting how some people
just take it as it is and go on their way.
I believe that existential angst lies within everyone; but most of us push
it down deep within the crevices of our souls due to fear of the unknown.
That’s the problem, though; we are sometimes afraid of the incomprehensible.
We try to remain in our little bubble of protection and familiarity in order
to come to terms with life. What this ends up doing, though, is preventing us from
growing, expanding, and experiencing all. Once we accept, become intrigued by, and
pursue the solving of the mysteries around us, we can reach our true potential.
I believe we must go beyond ourselves and explore the enigmatic depths of the universe
in order to live fully. Without this exploration, we are to remain forever stationary, and that
would definitely make our lives meaningless. We are meant to embrace the mysteries,
for they are what drive us to continue in life.
One should always be happy, look at the bright side
and radiate love on a daily basis, no matter what
circumstances one is facing.
Growing up in a Jewish household, it was expected for me to attend Hebrew
school. At my temple, Temple Rodeph Torah, I practiced my religion twice a
week and accomplished enough to succeed in having a bat mitzvah.
A few weeks before my bat mitzvah, I was given my Hebrew name: Simha.
At first I begged to change it, claiming that it was “ugly” (as a normal 13-yearold girl would). But the meaning behind it was valuable.
Simha is understood in Hebrew to mean happiness. And I can truly say
the shoe fits the foot. With that name, I feel it is my spiritual duty to carry out
the title, but I didn’t always feel that way. My parents always used to say how
pessimistic I was, and it was a family joke that I reminded all my relatives of George Carlin.
It was not until recently that I realized being happy is vital to survival. There is no reason
not to be happy. Being upset only puts a damper on top of already existing negativity.
What made me realize that happiness is important was a quote I read by John Lennon:
“When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life.
When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down
‘happy.’ They told me I didn’t understand the assignment, and I told them they didn’t
understand life.”
After reading this, it finally clicked. I threw my sorrows and negativity away. I began to
look at the glass as being half full, rather than half empty. Life is too short to be anything
but happy, and I strive to embrace every moment that God and life have to offer me.
I spend each day with a smile on my face, facing all possibilities with a positive attitude.
This I, Kayla Simone Simha Weinman, believe: One should always be happy, look at the
bright side and radiate love on a daily basis, no matter what circumstances one is facing.
B Y K AY L A W E I N M A N
CLASS OF 2016
B Y T R AC Y J E R E Z
CLASS OF 2016
IN GOOD HANDS
GEOGRAPHIC
DISTRIBUTION
New Jersey
COUNTRIES REPRESENTED
1029
Out of state
411
International
15
South Korea
China Thailand
Canada
Trinidad and Tobago
Côte D’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
India
Turkey
Nigeria
28
Saudi Arabia
Data provided by Stephen Deutsch in the Office of Institutional Research
In a perfect example of serendipity, Freshman
Studies won two national awards for advising and
student retention as the department was marking
25 years of service to Seton Hall University.
The National Academic Advising Association
conferred a certificate of merit on the department
in October as an Outstanding Advising Program.
Three weeks later, Freshman Studies was recognized as the Best Practice program of 2012 at
the National Symposium on Student Retention.
The award came with a trophy and a $2,000 prize.
Founded in 1987, the program has three
components. Each new freshman is assigned a
professional mentor and a well-trained peer adviser
from the sophomore, junior or senior classes.
In addition, all freshmen take a University Core
course, “University Life,” which completes the
orientation process that begins during the summer
at “Pirate Adventure.”
“This three-pronged approach to the transition
to college has helped bolster our first-year retention
rates and increased student satisfaction with firstyear advising,” says Tracy Gottlieb, vice president
of Student Services. The 2011-12 retention rate
showed a 7 percent increase from 10 years before.
“Freshman Studies is not just about advising
students on their choice of courses,” Gottlieb says.
“One of the strengths of our department is that
we provide advising and support services to ensure
overall student success.”
Peer advisers provided more than 700 hours
of tutoring in the fall semester. Freshman Studies
also provided supplemental instruction in which
students from upper classes attend difficult freshman courses and provide follow-up recitations in
support of the professor’s lecture. Support is also
provided during formal study halls.
Freshman Studies extended its outreach last year
to include new transfer students with the creation
of the Academic Success and Transfer Student
Center, also located in Mooney Hall. “Now, transfer
students receive the same help and support that
has characterized our outreach to freshmen for a
generation,” Gottlieb says. | A L F R A N K
29
SPORTS |
MATTHEW A. SWEENEY ’00
TOUCHED BY GOLD
OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST MISSY FRANKLIN SHOOTS
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS AT SETON HALL
eton Hall hosted an Olympic icon this fall when four-time gold medalist Missy
S
Franklin shot a series of public service announcements for the Multiple Sclerosis
Association of America (MSAA) at the Pirates’ Arthur E. Imperatore Natatorium.
Franklin, an ambassador for the MSAA’s Swim for MS program, spent a November
morning shooting video and posing for photos.
Swim for MS is a national fundraiser that encourages volunteers to create their
own swim challenges while soliciting donations to support the fight against multiple
sclerosis. The fundraiser is unique because the events are planned by the individuals,
not by the organization. Volunteers can participate individually or recruit other
swim enthusiasts to form a team.
MSAA President and CEO Doug Franklin, Missy’s uncle, said Seton Hall was the
perfect place to shoot her public service announcements.
“The athletics staff was amazing at meeting the needs of our organization and
facilitated the process for everyone involved,” he said. “I thank Seton Hall for helping
MSAA fulfill our mission to enrich the quality of life for everyone affected by MS.”
After Missy Franklin left, several members of the Seton Hall swim team participated
in a photo shoot to show their support for the MSAA and Swim for MS.
(Above) Missy Franklin (with Seton Hall swim coach Ron
Farina) spent a morning at the Arthur E. Imperatore
Natatorium shooting public service announcements for
the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America. (facing
page) Pirate swimmers Andrea Shuba ’13, left, and
Brenna O’Keefe ’13 support the cause.
“It was a great opportunity for our swimmers to help raise awareness about MS,”
said Ron Farina, head swimming and diving coach at Seton Hall. “It’s a relationship
we hope to continue and expand in the future.”
This was the second time in recent years that the Pirates’ swim facility was
used as the backdrop for video shoots featuring Olympic stars. In September 2011,
Michael Phelps, Ryan Lochte and Natalie Coughlin made the trip to Seton Hall
“It was a great
“The exposure our swimming program has received over the past year and a half
by hosting four U.S. Olympic swimmers is tremendous. Coupled by the fact that these
four Olympians are arguably the most recognizable in the world, it is just fantastic
for the program and Seton Hall University,” Farina said.
More information on Swim For MS can be found at SwimforMS.org.
30
Photos by Anna Weber
to shoot commercials for Speedo.
opportunity
for our swimmers
to help raise
awareness about MS.”
31
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
SPORTS | M A T T H E W A . S W E E N E Y ’ 0 0
WOMEN’S GOLF
Seton Hall finally broke through at the Rutgers Women’s
Invitational to claim its second team championship in
program history, winning by seven strokes over the 21-team
FA L L S U C C E S S S P U R S H I G H H O P E S
field. The Pirates’ 11-over-par, 299, in round one set the
program record for a par-72 course.
“Our play heading into this tournament proved we were
T
he young Seton Hall women’s golf program had top-five
capable of this,” Doell said. “We just needed to put it all
finishes in five tournaments last fall, and has energized
together, focus and play our best game. When we do that,
its followers for what could be a thrilling spring season.
we can be a pretty formidable team.”
The team, which formed in Fall 2010, opened the season
The Pirates finished their fine fall at the Lehigh University
with a second-place tie among a field of 15 teams at the
Invitational, where for the third time in the season the team
Bucknell Invitational, finishing just one stroke behind
placed second by just one stroke. Junior Hannah Basalone
Boston University and tying with BIG EAST foe Rutgers.
fired a 1-under-par, 71, in the final round. Her fifth place
Freshman Megan Tenhundfeld, playing in her first collegiate
was the fifth top-five finish of her career, and the most
event, led the Pirates at 20-over par and placed eighth
in program history.
among 84 golfers.
Seton Hall kept the positive momentum going the following
“Hannah has battled through a lot this fall, so it’s
wonderful to see her come through like this in the final
week, placing second by one stroke to host St. John’s. It was
round of the fall season,” Doell said. “She will undoubtedly
a historic tournament for sophomore Ali Kruse, who became
be an integral part of our future success, just as she has
the second Pirate to win an individual title with a one-stroke
been in our successes of the past.”
victory over a pair of competitors.
“I think we’re only scratching the surface with Ali,” said
“The team set four performance goals entering the fall,”
Doell said. “They wanted to break 300 strokes in a single
head coach Sara Doell. “She has the ability to be a very good
round, break their single-round stroke record, average
golfer in this conference for a long time.”
better than they did last fall and win a tournament. We
The most difficult tournament on the fall schedule was the
Yale Women’s Intercollegiate, where the Pirates had struggled
the last two seasons. This time, Seton Hall finished in a tie
for fourth among 16 teams.
Kruse notched her third top-10 finish in three tournaments
achieved all four goals in five tournaments.”
Now the Pirates are hungry for more and looking
forward to the new season.
“When I set the spring schedule, I tried to incorporate
some tournaments we could win and others with strong
and finished eighth among 89 golfers, leading the Pirates
fields that we could grow from,” Doell said. “Given our
with a 1-over-par, 73, in the final round. Her second-round
performance this fall, I now think we have a shot to
70 set the program record for lowest single-round score.
win them all.” ■
“Of all of our success this fall, I take the most from
our performance at Yale,” Doell said. “That was, by far,
the most talented field we faced, and it was played on a
very challenging course. For us to tie the host for fourth
place among a field that strong really speaks to how
On the Upswing: (far left) Hannah Basalone ’14 recorded her fifth topfive finish of her career in October. (left) Ali Kruse ’15 set the program
record for lowest single-round score. (bottom) Back row, from left: Megan
Tenhundfeld ’16, Stacie Ballou ’14, Karlie Zabrosky ’16, Ali Kruse ’15 and
Erin McClure ’15. Front row, from left: Haley Van Es ’14, Christina Cantú ’14,
Hannah Basalone ’14, Samantha Massei ’14 and McKenzie Cutter ’15.
far we’ve come in three years.”
33
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
pirates in print
Libraries, Classrooms, and the Interests of
Democracy: Marking the Limits of Neoliberalism
By John Buschman, D.L.S., dean of University Libraries
(Rowman & Littlefield/The Scarecrow Press, Inc., $65)
Library marketing and advertising in schools are now widespread
practices. Should that be the case? John Buschman details the
connections between educational institutions and democracy. Drawing
on wide scholarship to explore the history of democratic theory and
how it intertwines with capitalism, the author helps the reader think
about how democracies can deal with the challenges of the current
historical phase. The award-winning book makes clear that issues
concerning public educational institutions in a democracy are political.
Adaptive Learning and the Human Condition
By Jeffrey C. Levy, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology (Pearson, $172.20)
Jeffrey C. Levy’s textbook reviews psychological research findings
related to classical and instrumental conditioning. These conditioning
processes result in adaptive learning enabling individuals to predict
and control their environments. Levy shows how such learning can
occur directly through one’s own experience or indirectly through
observation and language. He helps readers consider how the adaptive
learning process, coupled with the ability to create and use tools, has
enabled the human being to transform the human condition. Levy
shows how adaptive learning principles enable us to understand,
and in instances address, significant contemporary individual and
social concerns.
A Grief Unveiled: One Father’s Journey through
the Death of a Child — Fifteen Years Later
By Gregory Floyd, M.A.T. ’04 (Paraclete Press, $17.99)
Following the death of his 6-year-old son, Gregory Floyd explores the
complex relationship between grief and faith and the impact of such
a loss on a Catholic family. With brutal honesty, Floyd reveals the
depths of his pain as he struggles to provide leadership for his
family and questions the goodness of God. He also answers the
question: what is it like to live with such grief 10 or 15 years later?
The New American Poetry of Engagement:
A 21st Century Anthology
Edited by Ann Keniston and Jeffrey Gray, Ph.D., professor of postwar American poetry,
postcolonial literature and literary theory (McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, $29.95)
With 138 poems by 50 established and emerging American poets,
this anthology addresses themes pertinent to this century — including
violence, governmental policies, ecological and political threats, and
economic uncertainty. The poems not only describe the events of our
time, they also explore the problems involved in bearing witness in
this way. The collection offers a comprehensive look at current American
poetry, demonstrates how poets are engaging with public concerns
and illustrates the problems of such representation.
Encyclopedia of a Life in Russia
By José Manuel Prieto, Ph.D., associate professor of Latin American literature
(Black Cat, an imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc., $15.95)
Set during the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, José Prieto’s novel
follows Thelonius Monk and Linda Evangelista, two misfits caught
between old traditions and capitalist ideals. Thelonius finds his muse
in the elusive Linda on the streets of Saint Petersburg. He convinces
her to travel with him to Yalta with promises to make her famous in
the fashion magazines. So taken with Linda that he’s writing a novel
about her, Monk’s notes for the book comprise the Encyclopedia. In a
style that breaks from conventional narrative structure, Prieto fuses
elements of literature, philosophy and pop culture to tell the story of
two people polarized by art and commerce while parodying the Russian
fascination with America and its fixation on beauty.
New Jersey: A History of the Garden State
Edited by Maxine N. Lurie, Ph.D., professor emerita of history,
and Richard Veit, Ph.D. (Rutgers University Press, $27.95)
Maxine N. Lurie and Richard Veit’s book traces the evolution of the
Garden State from the prehistoric era to the present to create the first
general history of New Jersey in more than 35 years. The book explores
the state’s Native American heritage, the colonial era, the American
Revolution, industrialization, slavery and entrance into the Civil
War. It also covers the development of major city centers and shore
communities that created a destination for immigrants and made
New Jersey one of the country’s most diverse states. The book not
only describes New Jersey’s achievements as a state, but also its
position in the fabric of the United States.
Note to authors: To have your commercially published book considered
for “Pirates in Print,” send your information and a review copy to Seton Hall
magazine, 457 Centre Street, South Orange, NJ 07079. Please request our
guidelines first by writing to shuwriter@shu.edu.
Book descriptions contain direct quotes from book covers and publisher-provided materials.
34
35
A DVA N C E M E N T
SPIRIT OF GIVING
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
A Legacy of
Family Giving
Continues
Seton Hall family, well known for their love of the
University and their generous support. The family’s
social work.
An uncle, Charles Farinella, attended Seton
legacy began with the late Frank Paul Farinella Jr. ’49
Hall and graduated in 1948, and Joe’s sister, Mary,
and his wife, Josephine. The couple’s names adorn the
earned an M.B.A. in 2007 from the Stillman School
main gate to the University, and their philanthropy
of Business. Their brother, James, attended Seton Hall
has opened doors of opportunity to many others.
Prep and graduated from the Law School in 1992.
Now, their son Joseph ’79/J.D. ’93 is continuing
the tradition of giving.
Following the death of his father last year, Joseph
“Seton Hall has been important to our family
and we’ve been very active in the University,” says
Farinella, president of Coddington Homes Co., which
Farinella made a $100,000 contribution to the Univer-
has built more than 1,000 homes and developed
sity in the form of five annual $10,000 contributions
commercial property in New Jersey. The company
and a $50,000 bequest. “He is putting his imprimatur
is now building in the Allentown area of eastern
on a legacy of family giving,” said Stephen F. Izzo,
Pennsylvania. “With the passing of my parents, I
helped build. As they grew older, Monsignor Robert
associate director of the Seton Hall Fund, who con-
felt it was important to continue our commitment.”
R. Sheeran ’67, president emeritus, frequently cele-
Pirate Legacy: Nicole Farinella ’15 follows in the footsteps of her
father, Joseph Farinella ’79/J.D. ’93, left, and grandfather, Frank
Paul Farinella Jr. ’49, by working toward a Seton Hall degree.
ministry at their parish, Saint James Church, in
Springfield, N.J., which Frank and Josephine also
brated Mass in the couple’s home.
Frank Farinella was a well-known New Jersey
Later, as the University prepared for the 2004
builder and developer who constructed more than
launch of the $150 million Ever Forward campaign,
support the University’s most pressing needs. An active
3,000 homes and apartments during his career.
Frank — then a regent emeritus — and Josephine
liked him, and we were all very close with Monsignor
member of Seton Hall’s Parent Leadership Council,
He attended Seton Hall on the GI Bill to earn his
donated $250,000. Their generosity was due in
Sheeran and spent a lot of time with him,” Farinella says.
Farinella has made previous donations to the Seton
bachelor’s degree in English and went on to receive a
no small measure to the high regard the Farinella
Family, faith and tradition all contributed to
degree in architectural engineering from Rensselaer
family felt for the priests who have served Seton
reinforcing a strong bond with the University that
Polytechnic Institute in New York.
Hall over the years.
sulted with Farinella on his recent contributions.
Earmarked for the Seton Hall Fund, this gift will
Hall Fund and the School of Law.
“We have a great love and a special place in our
hearts for Seton Hall and that’s why we do what
we do,” says Farinella.
From 1987 to 1992, Frank served on the Board
of Regents and chaired its buildings and grounds
Father Michael E. Kelly ’62, now a monsignor
and headmaster at the Prep, was chaplain to Joseph
“John’s a really good guy and my parents really
was formed more than 60 years ago and now extends
into a third generation.
“Those were some of the greatest years of my life —
committee when the campus underwent major
Farinella’s fraternity, Sigma Pi, where classmate
academically, socially, everything — and there is that
besides Seton Hall, Farinella says his father’s ties
growth with the construction of three residence
John Dennehy ’79/M.Div. ’84 was a brother. Dennehy
spiritual dimension from the University,” Farinella
to the University were so strong there was little
halls for students, a residence for priests, the
was ordained a priest in 1981 and now serves as
says. “My parents were extremely devout and we
doubt he too would become a Pirate. His daughter,
parking deck and the expansion of the Recreation
University chaplain.
grew up in that regard. That has a lot to do with it.”
Nicole, is a sophomore majoring in English and
Center. It was during that time that the Farinella
minoring in journalism/public relations, and
Gate opened at the eastern end of the campus.
Although he had applied to five other colleges
36
a cousin, Anneliesa, is a freshman majoring in
Photo by Milan Stanic
The Farinellas have been called a quintessential
As his parents grew older, Farinella says he often
took them to Father Dennehy’s Masses at his weekend
■
Al Frank ’72/M.A. ’10 is an adjunct professor at Seton Hall and
a writer based in Parsippany, N.J.
37
90s
alumni
38
60s
70s
80s
Maria Mazziotti Gillan ’61 wrote a book titled
Writing Poetry to Save Your Life. It combines
her personal story as a writer with suggestions
for writers at all stages of development. She
is also the subject of the documentary film
All That Lies Between Us, which profiles her
life and work. … Paul F. Gibbons ’62 was
appointed to the N.J. Commission on Holocaust
Education by Gov. Chris Christie. … Bernadette
(Turner) Dwyer ’63 became a grandmother to
her 12th grandchild. … Richard D. Riva ’66
was appointed to a four-year term on the
N.J. State Board of Dentistry by Gov. Chris
Christie. … Robert M. Fischer ’64/M.A.E. ’68
retired from Seton Hall Prep after serving as a
faculty member for 48 years. During his years
as a French and history teacher, he became a
legend in the hallways of the Prep. … Jack V.
Behnken, M.A.E. ’67 is an adjunct professor
at Rowan University. He supervises student
teachers in health and exercise science. …
Lawrence R. Codey, J.D. ’69 was awarded
the distinguished service award from the N.J.
Utilities Association for his accomplished
career in the utility and service sectors.
Bettye J. King, M.A.E. ’73 received an honor
from the School of Education as a 35-year
charter member of Kappa Delta Pi. … Lester
E. Anderson, M.A.E. ’74 was a co-inventor
of a computer networking patent titled
Monitoring Business Machines Using a Mesh
Network on Field Nodes. … Dr. Wesley S.
Blakeslee ’74 was appointed to the advisory
board for PennWell Publications. … Tova
Navarra ’74 is the author of 30 books to date
and is a subject of biography in Who’s Who in
America. Her book, The Kid’s Guidebook: Great
Advice to Help Kids Cope, has been translated
into several languages. She has also been a
working artist for 40 years. … Jean D’Meza
Leuner ’75 was inducted into the American
Academy of Nursing. The academy comprises
more than 1,850 nursing leaders. … Daniel J.
McIntyre ’76 was elected to the board of
directors at the California Healthcare Institute. …
Jim P. Manfredonia ’77 was awarded the
Benemerenti Medal by Pope Benedict XVI in
recognition of his company, Domestic Church
Media. The company was founded by Jim and
his wife, Cheryl, and operates New Jersey’s
only two Catholic radio stations.
John O. Melody ’80 was inducted into the
Essex Catholic High School Hall of Fame. He
is an assistant director of security in the Saint
Barnabus Health Care System. … Robert
Leszczak ’81 wrote a book titled Single Season
Sitcoms, 1948-1979. The book highlights
short-lived sitcoms through photographs,
facts, interviews and stories. … Donna M.
Cusano-Sutherland ’83 was appointed senior
director of global commercial strategy lead at
Janssen Pharmaceuticals in Raritan, N.J. …
Matthew DeVoti ’84 received the Radio Wayne
Award from Radio Ink magazine. The award
honors sales and management professionals
who make a difference in the radio business. …
Colleen Peacock ’84 obtained her certification
as a legal nurse consultant and will be working
independently with medical malpractice law
firms. … Samuel J. Stoia ’86 opened a law
practice in Morristown, N.J. … Jeanine (Longo)
Cavanagh ’88/M.A.M. ’90 and her husband,
James Cavanagh ’88/M.H.A. ’06 received
the Immanuel Award at the 21st annual Bread
and Roses Ball in May 2011. The award is
given to individuals who exemplify selfless
determination to make the world a better place
through service and sacrifice.
Robert E. Nevin ’90 was appointed president and CEO
of Dermatopathology Laboratory of Central States. …
Gregory K. Kiraly, M.B.A. ’91 was appointed senior
vice president of electric distribution operations at
Pacific Gas & Electric Company. … William A. Ryan ’91
joined Morgan Stanley in Morristown, N.J., as senior
vice president of investments. … Gary M. Albrecht,
J.D. ’94 was named co-chair of the real-estate department
at Cole Schotz in Hackensack, N.J. He was also inducted
in 201 Magazine’s 2012 list of top lawyers in Bergen
County, N.J. … Jennifer Kamienski ’94 was named to
PRWeek’s “40 under 40” list of Rising Stars. Each year,
the publication honors executives who have exceeded
expectations in their corporate positions. … Luigi G.
Bastone ’95 is the vice president of regulatory control
at Citigroup. … Gina (Rabuck) Anton ’96 was selected
as vice chair of the American Bar Association, Young
Lawyers Division, Entertainment and Sports Industry
Committee. … Brendan Gill ’96 was elected to the
Essex County Board of Chosen Freeholders. He is the
state director for U.S. Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg. … Dr.
James F. Lawrence ’96 received a national award for
excellence in gerontological education. He was also
selected as one of four nurse practitioners in the southeast
Virginia medical system to participate in a dermatology
residency and was a presenter at the 2012 GAPNA
conference in Las Vegas. … Felipe Pedroso, J.D. ’96
was elected to serve on the Bridgewater, N.J., township
council. … Carmelo G. Garcia ’97, executive director
of the Hoboken Housing Authority, was selected as a
“game changer” by Politic365, a national publication on
multicultural politics. Politic365 honored 365 individuals
across the country, all of whom are creating opportunities
to improve the socio-economic and political climate in
the U.S. … Michael H. Esnes ’98 joined Union County
College as director of human resources. … Nicole A.
(Ultimo) Olaya ’99 was promoted to commercial
lender in the northern N.J. Commercial Lending Team
at Columbia Bank.
00s
Dr. Paul G. Mathew ’01 is a member of the faculty
at Harvard Medical School, where he holds a joint
clinical appointment serving as the director of headache
medicine at the Cambridge Health Alliance. He is also a
neurologist at Brigham & Women’s Hospital, John R.
Graham Headache Center. … Ralph Scianni, M.A. ’02
was appointed to chief of the Bayonne, N.J., Police
Department. … Frank Pannucci Jr. ’03/M.P.A. ’08
was elected to the Brick Township Board of Education
in November. … John Perez ’05 received his master’s
degree from Yale School of Management and accepted
a position in a leadership development program at
Johnson & Johnson. … Michael W. Cole ’06/M.S. ’07
was on the second-place team at St. John’s alternative
resolution securities triathlon. Also, his article titled
Using Governmental Incentives to Finance Solar
Renewable Energy Projects: Alternative Investments
for High Net Worth Individuals is being published in
the LSU Journal of Energy Law and Resources. …
Rachel Corrigan ’08 passed the Arizona Bar Exam
and is an associate at Bryan Cave LLP. … Christopher
Torres ’08/M.A. ’10 is serving as operations officer
of the guided missile destroyer USS Howard, where
he completed a deployment to the Horn of Africa and
the Western Pacific. In 2013, he will join the staff of
Destroyer Squadron One, based in San Diego. … Teresa
Korbesmeyer ’09 finished her Peace Corps service
in Botswana. She is an employment specialist for
Lutheran Social Services Refugee Resettlement
Program in Tucson. … Nicholas Sena, M.P.A. ’11
was named leadership annual giving coordinator at
the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. … Bradley
Kerstetter ’12 joined the Harrisburg Heat, in the
Professional Arena Soccer League, as a defender. …
Emily Meredith, J.D. ’12 was appointed director of
communications at the Animal Agriculture Alliance.
“I Do’s” at the Immaculate Conception Chapel: (facing page)
Dina Fellanto ’08 and Kevin Cashin ’08 married Nov. 9, 2012,
(above left) Kimberly Harry ’09 and Matthew Mills ’09/J.D. ’12
married Sept. 8, 2012, (above right) Katie Kennedy ’07 and
Gabriel Rohaidy ’07 married Sept. 7, 2012
Get Your Alumni Card
Thousands of alumni around the
world carry the Seton Hall Alumni Card.
Do you?
On campus and beyond, your alumni
card represents your pride in Seton
Hall and gives you access to special
discounts, contests and promotions.
Get your free card now at:
www.shu.edu/go/alumnicard.
39
N E W S & N OT E S
Marriages
Baby Pirates
Claudia Lucas ’95 to Marino Ioannou
Janice Martinez ’95 to Rick Woerner
Matthew R. Markus ’03 to Lynn Zellers
Andrew G. Sullivan ’03 to Sarah Hensler
Vanessa Musella ’04 to Richard J. Schubring ’03
Kenneth D. McPeek Jr. ’05 to Amanda Hess
Katie E. Kennedy ’07 to Gabriel A. Rohaidy ’07
Denise Myles ’07 to Johnnie Hunter ’05
Elizabeth Stuckart ’07 to Allen Martin
Dina Fellanto ’08 to Kevin Cashin ’08
Alexandra Firmino ’08/M.A.E. ’11 to Daniel Aiello
Maria E. King ’08 to Joshua Isaacson
Kimberly Stewart ’08 to Steven Wrzesinski ’09
Kimberly Harry ’09 to Matthew Mills ’09/J.D. ’12
Kimberly E. Kassing ’09 to Matthew J. Creange ’07/
M.B.A. ’09
Hannah Alaouie ’10 to Bradley Hyman
Joe Luppino-Esposito, J.D. ’11 to Amanda Yasenchak
Anthony Lanzo ’91/M.A.E. ’94/E.D.S. ’99/E.D.D. ’03
and Sharon, a girl, Madeline Marguerite, on May 21, 2012
Sylvana R. (Gavilanes) Budesheim ’01/M.A.E. ’03
and Matthew, a girl, Juliana Rose, on October 1, 2012
Claudia (Lucas) Ioannou ’95 and Marino, a girl, Rosalia
Labrini, on December 15, 2011
Richard Foster ’01 and Amanda, twin girls, Isabella Ann
and Giuliana Marie, on July 19, 2012
Janice (Martinez) Woerner ’95 and Rick, a girl, Hayden,
on March 17, 2012
Lizette M. (Graiff) Goodman ’01/M.B.A. ’05 and
Brian, J.D. ’05, a girl, Gabrielle Grace, on June 23, 2012
Terese S. (Gardenier) Miletic ’97 and Robert, a girl,
Gia Theresa on October 23, 2012
Paul G. Mathew ’01 and Treasa, a girl, Lauren, on
June 19, 2012
Kelly Valli ’97 and Steve, a boy, Joshua Ryan, on July 17, 2012
Victoria (Murphy) Picco ’02/M.A. ’03 and Joseph ’01/
M.P.A. ’03, twin girls, Caterina and Sofia, on October 4, 2012
Kristy A. (Skabla) Sobel ’98 and Jason, a boy, Joshua
Jake, on December 24, 2011
Brian J. McGee ’99 and Kathryn, a boy, Jackson Charles,
on April 27, 2012
Esohe (Alile) Motta ’00 and Scott ’99/M.B.A. ’00,
a boy, Sean Joseph Emwantosa, on October 17, 2011
Kristin (Mettman) Touhill ’07/M.S. ’07 and Peter ’07,
a boy, Gavin Peter, on April 29, 2012
Ryan J. Tetro, J.D. ’10 and Jamie, a boy, Benjamin Ryan,
on October 2, 2012
SOCIAL NETWORKS
Find Alumni Relations on Facebook
and learn about events being held on
campus (and in your area), the most
recent campus news, and the latest
updates from your former classmates.
Search for the Seton Hall University
Alumni page and become a fan.
Follow Alumni Relations on Twitter,
www.twitter.com/setonhallalumni. Get
timely updates on campus happenings.
Highlighting Connections
The Office of Alumni Relations is
seeking feedback on how graduates
use social-networking sites to form
and maintain connections. Whether
for personal reasons or business,
millions of people connect daily on
these sites.
Glamour Shot: Madeline Marguerite (top), daughter of
Sharon and Anthony Lanzo ’91/M.A.E. ’94/E.D.S. ’99/E.D.D.
’03, is ready for her close-up. Double the Joy: Madison Grace
and Brianna Lynn (bottom left), twin daughters of Katie
(Herr) Hausmann ’07 and Buddy ’03 are ready for spring
training. Caterina and Sofia (bottom right), twin daughters
of Victoria (Murphy) Picco ’02/M.A. ’03 and Joseph
’01/M.P.A. ’03, strike a pose with Santa and the Pirate.
How are you using social-networking
sites? Have you connected with old
friends or new business contacts?
Have you joined Seton Hall’s social
networks? Have they provided a
meaningful benefit?
Send your thoughts to alumni@shu.edu.
40
F
PROFILEIn Step
Seton Hall’s LinkedIn group can help
you manage your network of career and
professional contacts. Search for the
Seton Hall University Alumni Network.
ounded at Seton Hall in 1952, the K-8
chapter of The Pershing Rifle club taught
young men responsibility, discipline and
impressive drill tricks. More than 60 years later,
however, the most important tenet instilled in
members continues to be unity.
Competing in drill routines against area
schools such as Fordham, Polytechnic Institute
of Brooklyn and Saint Peter’s in the ’50s and
’60s, the Pershing Rifles built a tradition of
excellence that led to an abundance of trophies
housed in a dayroom built by the club on the
third floor of McQuaid Hall. Meeting in the
school parking lot every day at 6 a.m. sharp,
no matter the weather, the group practiced
intricate marches and rifle-throwing routines
performed in total unison. Like a school of
fish, the Pershing Rifles moved together as one.
As word spread about the group’s talent,
they were contacted by a Schaefer Beer Company
representative who invited them to New York
City to perform a drill to be used in a television
commercial. In return, Schaefer Beer contributed
$5,000 to the club, which offset travel and
equipment expenses. Their star rose higher still
when the group went on to win a national drill
title in 1967.
Read Walsh’s blog here:
http://captainslogblog.typepad.com/companyk8/
The next annual alumni reunion dinner will be
held on Nov. 2. Please contact Fred Palumbo
at fredp110@hotmail.com for more information.
Graduation, military service and relocations put
physical distance between the group’s members,
but the spirit of brotherhood inspired them to stay
close. “I talk to my guys every day via email,” says
Mike Walsh ’68. “It’s usually a little joke, just to say
‘good morning! Here’s a little funny thing.’ ” Friendships became easier to maintain in 2006, thanks
to Joe Dattoli ’69, who started the group’s blog.
When Dattoli passed away several years later
following a battle with cancer, Walsh picked up
where his friend left off, intent on expanding the
site’s audience. Asking each of his contacts to
provide contact information for other members
and requesting data from the alumni office,
Walsh and Fred Palumbo ’71 built a database
of more than 120 Pershing Rifle alumni, many
of whom now regularly read and comment on
the blog. The alumni also regularly meet at
gatherings Palumbo organizes.
Drill teams emphasize the importance of
moving and thinking as one in competition.
The extraordinary teamwork, dedication
and brotherhood developed at Seton Hall keep
the Pershing Rifle Club in step even today. ■
| E R I N H E A LY
FOREVER AS ONE: (top left) The trick drill team poses in uniform
for the Newark Evening News (now The Star-Ledger) in 1967. (top
right) Mike Lukacs ’68, Seton Hall President Bishop John Dougherty,
Domenic Zazzaro ’67 and Col. James Schmidt celebrate the Pershing
Rifle’s 1967 National Championship. (bottom right) Mike Walsh ’68
and Fred Palumbo ’71 keep the bond of brotherhood going strong.
41
SETON HALL MAGAZINE | WINTER/SPRING 2013
N E W S & N OT E S
Sam Giuliano
1926-2012
42
J. Gerald Levey ’58/M.B.A. ’65
Monsignor George Lutz ’58
Bernard F. Corbett, M.A.E. ’59
Agnes W. Croneiser ’59
Maryon J. (Farley) Maher, M.A.E. ’59
William O’Brien ’59
John T. Ruiz Sr. ’59
Daniel Samel ’59
Sister John M. Scopeileti ’59
Charles B. Grace Sr. ’60
Daniel R. Kehr Sr. ’60
John W. Reinman ’60/J.D. ’70
Stewart Weiss, J.D. ’60
Arthur E. Coughlin ’61
Richard A. Holmes ’61
Kenneth W. Klein ’61
Samuel A. Soprano Jr., M.A.E. ’61
James K. Flanagan ’62
Robert H. Hertel ’62
Audrey C. Zaiser ’62
Robert S. Basch ’63
Olympia E. Bracuto ’63
Jerry Rutkowski ’63
Lucia A. (Lamorte) Bowers, M.A.E. ’64
Madeline DeRosa ’64
Philip T. Dukes ’64
Joseph J. Estenes Jr. ’64
Richard J. Reeve Sr. ’64
David P. Ericksen ’65/J.D. ’75
Stephen J. Fontanella ’65
Edward F. Kennedy ’65
Audrey A. McParlin, M.A.E. ’65
Gerald Meola ’65
Richard J. Perosa ’65
Louis A. Weber, M.A.E. ’65
John E. Burbridge, M.A.E. ’66
Ellen M. Gambatese ’66
Judith Koletar ’66
Father John A. Prinelli ’66
Maureen L. (Parks) Todd ’66
Ann C. (Kearney) Concannon, M.A.E. ’67
Thomas E. Loughlin ’67
Sister Eileen Pavlitschko ’67
Walter D. Rogowsky, M.A.E. ’67
Sister Mary X. Casey, M.A.E. ’68
Monsignor Kevin M. Hanbury ’68/
M.D.M. ’75/E.D.S. ’79/E.D.D. ’85
Sharon A. (Gancarz) Holster ’68
Anna Maiorano ’68
Nicholas A. Mennuti ’68
Harold G. Wolf, Ph.D. ’68
Albert J. Ardizzone, M.A.E. ’69
Cheryl A. (Knight) Devlin ’69
Phyllis K. Donoghue ’69
Cathleen P. Doyle ’69
Patricia A. (Pavlitschko) Silkowski ’69
Sidney L. Bloom, J.D. ’70
Robert P. Herald ’70
Mary (Smyth) Hoffmann ’70
Ronald J. Kwacz ’70
Lawrence K. Memmola ’70
John F. Doublier ’71
Father Arthur F. Humphrey ’71/
M.D.M. ’75
Mary S. Jankiewicz ’71
Michael J. Mahoney ’71
Sister Rita Tassinari ’71
Peter J. Gutkowski ’72
On July 26, 2012, Sam Giuliano ’50, one
of Seton Hall’s most loyal supporters, passed
away. The retired president and chief executive
officer of USLIFE Title Insurance Co. graduated
from Seton Hall with a bachelor of science in
business and received an M.B.A. from New York
University in 1954.
Congratulations, Class of 2013
Ties that Bind
A resident of South Orange, Giuliano served
the University in many capacities over the years, including as a member of the University
Advisory Council, the Immaculate Conception Seminary School of Theology's Board of
Overseers, the Stillman School of Business Advisory Board and the President's Advisory
Council. In 1970, he was named Distinguished Alumnus of the School of Business and,
in 2010, he received the inaugural Stillman Lifetime Achievement Award.
He and his late wife, Rosetta, are the parents of four devoted daughters, Alice Giuliano,
Nancy Durando, Janice Giuliano and the late Elizabeth Magnes. The Elizabeth Ann
Giuliano Magnes Memorial Scholarship in the College of Education was established
by Sam and Rosetta for Elizabeth, a member of the Class of 1975, who died in 1985.
Sam remained a constant and generous benefactor of the University and was a member
of the Hazard Zet Forward Society and Pirate Blue, exemplifying the ideals of stewardship
and servant leadership in all he did as a Setonian.
Did you have a special interest at Seton Hall?
A passion that sparked your interest?
Seton Hall’s Alumni Clubs bring together
graduates who share common connections
from their student experience. Whether
you’d like to join a club that already exists
or one that is in formation, or if you’ve
got a group and would like to be officially
recognized by Seton Hall, Alumni Relations
wants to hear from you.
The Alumni Club program provides all the
support you need to get engaged.
Welcome to the alumni family of more than 90,000 Pirates
around the world.
In the coming weeks, months and years, Seton Hall and
the members of the Young Alumni Club will offer many
meaningful ways for you to stay involved. The best way
for us to contact you is by email.
Update your email address to stay in touch with Seton Hall
and the Young Alumni Club! Complete the form by June 1
and you will be entered to win a Seton Hall alumni prize
pack including a diploma frame and more.
Visit www.tinyurl.com/SHU2013InfoUpdate
Current Clubs/Clubs in Formation
Shirley T. (Swinscoe) Komisarczyk,
M.A.E. ’72
Daniel Petrowsky ’72
Edward R. MacPhee Jr. ’73
Dennis A. Maycher, J.D. ’73
Pauline P. (Gisoldi) Mazza, M.A.E. ’73
Eileen (Budd) O’Donnell, M.A.E. ’73
Andrew P. Sammarco ’73
Henry C. Cleffi ’74
John D. Clemen, J.D. ’74
John D. DiFilippo Sr. ’74
Peter T. Doran, M.A.E. ’74
William G. Greer, M.B.A. ’74
Catherine A. McNamara, M.A.E. ’74
Thomas F. Corbett ’75
George Crowley II ’75
James S. Underwood ’75
John E. Ziegler ’75
Thomas F. Hartnett, J.D. ’76
Louis J. Kady, J.D. ’76
Louis J. Pennucci Jr. ’76
William M. Farley ’77
Douglas F. Hatchman Jr., M.B.A. ’77
Judith Mayo ’77
Kathleen (Cassidy) Tevis ’77
Clarence J. Bibby Jr. ’78
Madeline S. (Shultz) Tracy, M.A.E. ’78
James H. Wharton, M.B.A. ’78
Lisa J. Campbell-Wiitala, J.D. ’78
Richard J. Begley, M.A. ’79
Alpheus E. Keller II, M.B.A. ’79
Margaret A. Marren ’79
Pauline V. Jarmon, M.A.E. ’80
Alison A. (Oliphant) Ready, M.B.A. ’81
Adrian J. Hollywood III ’82
Catherine A. (Lovett) McFaul, M.S.N. ’83
William F. Koonz Jr. ’85
Harold Siegel, M.B.A. ’85
Howard J. Porth Jr. ’86
Paul F. Cullum III, J.D. ’89
Joyce (Galvin) Veress ’89
Renee Y. (Golla) Schlachter ’90
•
•
•
•
•
David F. Hegarty ’91
Thomas P. Rainey, M.B.A. ’92
Ron Baglio Jr., M.A.E. ’94
Susan J. Clark, J.D. ’94
John X. Walker, M.A. ’94
Stephen V. Iannucci, M.A.E. ’95
Nicole M. (Quinby) Glazewski ’96/M.A. ’10
Brian T. Lynch, M.A.E. ’95/M.D.M. ’96
Joyce V. (Beisler) Clark ’99
Fred Kieser Jr., M.S. ’99
Linda (Vitale) Ryan ’03
Michael J. McHugh, J.D. ’04
Christopher R. Bedi, J.D. ’05
James G. Hoopes III, M.A. ’06
Toni-Marie (Verrone) Hals, M.A.E. ’11
Call for Regional Ambassadors
Represent Seton Hall in your area. Seton Hall needs Pirates
around the globe to represent the University by volunteering,
coordinating events for alumni and parents, serving as
an area contact and leading other initiatives. If you’re
interested in getting involved, please contact the Alumni
Relations team at (973) 378-9822 or alumni@shu.edu.
WSOU created a new,
state-of-the-art broadcast
room in memory of former
university professor Brother
Stanley P. Kosakowski.
Gregory L. Cellini ’85, along
with general manager Mark
Maben and Marie Zach, hosted
the studio dedication.
IN MEMORIAM
Monsignor Kevin Hanbury
Friends of
the University
Dolores Anderson
Mary Rose Barral
Lillian A. Bavero
Elizabeth Becker
William H. Boncher
Mary (Musikevicius) Bubenas
Jean Cataldo
Peter A. Cocoziello
Robert Cooper
Carol Earrusso
Louis J. Ferrera
Anna Garafolo
Paola Gausconi
James L. Langan
Veronica Lanigan
Maria Minieri
John J. Mitchell Jr.
Daniel L. Moore
Gerald Morrone
Gilbert L. Rathbun
Mary E. Tarrant
George J. Tzannetakis
John Walsh
Setonian Foundation of Phi Kappa Theta
Student Alumni Association
Honors Program
The Setonian Newspaper
Department of Public & Healthcare
Administration
Contact the alumni relations team at
(973) 378-9822 or alumni@shu.edu to
learn more about serving, networking
and socializing through Seton Hall’s
Alumni Club program.
1946–2012
’68/M.Div. ’75/Ed.S. ’79/Ed.D. ’85
Photo of Monsignor Kevin Hanbury by Ian Bradshaw
Henry A. Buklad ’39
Vincent J. DeSantis ’41
Frederick M. Kolarsick ’41
Sister Veronica DiSanto ’42
Peter A. Milone ’42
Elizabeth M. Stripp ’44
James G. Sullivan ’45
Eugene T. Murphy ’46
Edward W. Connolly Sr. ’47
Leonard W. Burrell ’48
Angelo T. Ferreri ’48
Charles W. Manger ’48
Francis J. Murphy ’48
Peter M. Baldino ’49
Nicholas L. Cirignano ’49
Joseph J. Dyer ’49
Robert W. Emmett ’49
John T. Gerhard ’49
William E. Gormley ’49
John C. Moore ’49
Stephen R. Niemiera ’49
Renald J. Alfano ’50
Leo H. Burrows ’50
Herman K. Dowe ’50
Samuel J. Giuliano ’50
James J. Mariani Jr. ’50/M.A.E. ’54
John D. Ryan ’50
Robert H. Spang ’50
John N. Tuttle Sr. ’50
John M. Capobianco ’51
Colonel Thomas J. Culkin ’51
Adolph DiMartino Jr. ’51
Robert J. Eiserle ’51
John P. Morro Sr. ’51
Joseph R. Quelly ’51
Joseph L. Reddan ’51
Anthony J. Scarponcini ’51
Edward Stepien ’51
Alfred Borys ’52
Joseph D’Allegro, M.A. ’52/M.A. ’55
Michael A. Delia ’52
Mary C. McCarthy ’52
John B. Mahoney ’52
Harriet (Kicinski) Zakutansky ’52
Archer D. Huott ’53
Vincent P. Lampariello ’53
Edward H. Miller ’53
Harold P. Olsen ’53
Thomas F. Kelly ’54
Richard Viventi ’54
Unis J. Baurkot ’55
John T. Curtis, M.A. ’55
Patrick McLaren ’55
Louis A. Modica ’55
Father Robert P. Cozzini ’56
Michael DeRogatis ’56
Carmine A. Duca ’56
Charles W. Doehler ’56
Bernard J. Goodwin ’56
Thomas B. Lobdell ’56/J.D. ’70
Bernard V. Synnott ’56
Vincent J. Browne ’57
Marie A. (Kohaut) Dougherty ’57
Arthur J. Fitzgerald ’57
Joseph D. Marion, M.A.E. ’57
Gena M. Scavuzzo ’57
Frank Arena ’58
Stephen S. Feehan ’58
Photo by Michael Paras
In Memoriam
Jesus told His disciples to “go forth and teach.” This
command exemplified Monsignor Hanbury’s life. As
a young priest, he taught at Seton Hall Prep. Soon
after gaining his graduate degrees, he became a
professor and associate dean in the University’s
College of Graduate Education, where he established
new programs dedicated to Catholic school leadership.
Later, he worked as superintendent of schools and vicar
of education for the Archdiocese of Newark and joined
Seton Hall’s Board of Regents.
It was most fitting that Monsignor Hanbury donated
the statue of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton that stands in
front of Jubilee Hall, for like Mother Seton herself, he
was entirely and selflessly devoted to Catholic education.
His assignment as superintendent of schools was not
an easy job; economic conditions forced him to close
several Catholic schools and to merge many others.
He often faced angry parents, disappointed that their
parish school was on the verge of collapse. Nevertheless,
he went to every meeting, personally and calmly addressing
the situation at hand. The issue, of course, was always
a lack of funds, but this obstacle never lessened his
commitment to Catholic education or to the transmission
of the Christian faith.
We live in an age that too often defines men and
women apart from God, but Monsignor Hanbury never
allowed that to happen. He was committed to Catholic
education because he knew that there is no fully rounded
view of humanity — no proper anthropology — without
a relationship to the God who has come uniquely near
to us in the love of Jesus Christ. Monsignor Hanbury
committed himself to transmitting this faith to thousands
upon thousands of young people.
This faith led him, for decades, to undertake not only
academic responsibilities, but also innumerable pastoral
ones. (I think of how many times Kevin married young people,
usually alumni of the University.) This faith allowed him,
no matter the difficulties he was facing, to be always a
kind and generous presence to his colleagues and
fellow priests.
We shall deeply miss his fraternal and magnanimous spirit.
— Father Thomas G. Guarino ’73, S.T.D., professor of theology
in the Immaculate Conception Seminary School of Theology
43
1
2
Pirate Pets
Thank you to all those students, alumni and friends who submitted pictures of
their pets showing their Pirate Pride! The Deehans’ dog has been selected for
having the most spirited photo! The Deehans (Theresa, Robin and Sean ’13)
and Coco will receive a Seton Hall prize pack.
PRIDE ON FOUR PAWS: 1. Bruno (Janelle LoBello M.P.A. ’13); 2. Jack Rooney
(Alexis Granell ’14); 3. Puppy (Annamarie Garretson ’50); 4. Sawyer (Valerie
Smith ’99/ M.P.A. ’02); 5. Ollie (Kenneth Larivee ’14); 6. Simon (Dennis Falci
’90); 7. Moose (Max Pascua ’02; and Felicia Escorpizo ’04)
3
4
5
6
7
PROFILEThe Connector
A
s an undergraduate who commuted,
Chris Sprague ’07 found it challenging to
balance campus leadership opportunities
with a demanding academic schedule.
When he returned as a graduate student
in the School of Diplomacy and International
Relations, Sprague became more involved
in University life. He realized the value of a
long-term commitment to Seton Hall — and
the importance of fostering similar connections
among other young alumni.
“I actually was not the most involved campus
member while a student, which is probably
why I feel the urge to contribute now,” he says.
Drawing on the experience of his uncle, the
president of Villanova’s Alumni Association,
Sprague co-founded the Young Alumni Club
in March 2011. The group encourages recent
graduates to remain connected with Seton
Hall long past graduation.
Sprague and his colleagues have made their
presence felt: raising funds for the Many Are
One gala, sending representatives to student
recruitment events, and scheduling alumni
networking events in the New York metropolitan
area. Since the group’s founding, giving by
young alumni has increased by 42 percent.
More than 100 people came back to campus in
December 2011 for the inaugural Young Alumni
Christmas Party, which included a sit-down
dinner, dancing and tricky-tray style auction. The
group drew more people to the 2012 Christmas
event, increased their contributions to the Seton
Hall Fund, and awarded the first Young Alumni
Impact Award to a recent graduate who has made
“a demonstrable, significant impact on Seton
Hall, their profession or their community.”
All alumni are welcome to attend the club’s
monthly meetings held on the first Wednesday
of each month.
“Young alumni who participate in the club
can expect to develop new friendships, network
with fellow alumni, participate in various oncampus events and renew their connection
with the Seton Hall community,” Sprague says.
“We have really focused on building a culture
where giving back to the University is a valued
pursuit among all members of the Seton Hall
community,” he says. “There’s a certain sense
of pride and accomplishment that we all share
in playing a role in the University’s future.”
For more information on the Young Alumni Club,
please visit blogs.shu.edu/youngalumniclub. ■
| E R I N H E A LY
The second annual Young Alumni Club Christmas party, December 2012
45
N E W S & N OT E S
Please join us for
Seton Hall University’s 27th
Parent Leadership Council
Seton Hall would like to thank the members
of the 2012-13 Parent Leadership Council.
Interested in finding out more about the council?
Please call Steve Izzo at (973) 378-2648.
Andrew Brereton, M.A.T. ’98 and Linda
Anthony and Nancy Conetta
Carl and Jean Dietze
Vinny Donnelly ’80 and Mary
Joseph Farinella ’79/J.D. ’93 and Jana Watts
Thomas Haborak, M.S.T. ’96 and Paula
Mark and Patricia Haefeli
Mary Lou Healy ’72 and James
James and Gale Longobardo
Thomas and Deborah Meyer
Gregory and Gerri Summers
Samer and Ragheda Zeitoun
Council Chaplain — Father Renato Bautista
ManyAre
One
New
Venue!
Pirate Pride
(Clockwise from left) Matthew Steele ’06
brought his pride all the way to Margalla
Greens Golf Club in Islamabad, Pakistan.
Bill Torres ’13 proudly wears his Pirate
flag on the Great Wall of China. Eilish R.
Harrington ’08 and Caitlin E. Krako ’09
show off their bandana at Giant’s Causeway
in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Alumni Awards Gala
Thursday, June 13, 2013
6 p.m.
Hanover Marriott
Whippany, New Jersey
Receive your free Seton Hall Bandana
by visiting www.shu.edu/alumni and
clicking on “Pirate Pride Gallery.”
Because you’re a Seton Hall alum...
10% discount on bookstore
purchases*
Visit the Bookstore for all your Pirate Blue needs!
30th annual
Young Alumni Reunion
@Bar Anticipation
www.SHU.bkstr.com
online. on campus.
Saturday, June 22, 2013
3-8 p.m. rain or shine
Do you receive the alumni Pirate
Press e-newsletter? Subscribe and
receive exclusive discounts on Seton
Hall merchandise as well as special
promotions. To subscribe, e-mail
Alumni Relations at alumni@shu.edu.
Save the Date
Join hundreds of fellow
Pirates to celebrate summer
at Bar Anticipation!
Seton Hall Weekend
October 4–6, 2013
Visit the Alumni Calendar
at www.shu.edu/alumni
for more information!
www.shu.edu/go/shuweekend
Come Home to the Hall
46
Photos by Anjelica Martino
For more information on this and other alumni benefits,
contact Alumni Relations at 1-800-992-GRAD
*Online discount code ALUMREG06 — Enter discount code into
“Order Comments” section. Must present Alumni ID if shopping in-store.
47
L A S T WO R D |
PEGEEN HOPKINS
And the Survey Says…
What clients have students worked with since the Market
Research Center launched? In the last 2½ years, we’ve
completed about 30 projects. They’ve run the gamut from
small startups to large businesses like UPS, Hackensack
University Medical Center and Planet Honda.
What kinds of business issues are clients looking to solve?
Sometimes the client’s issue is that business is slow
and they want to grow. Some want to evaluate their
social-media presence and see what customers think
about their website. Others want to learn how to attract
more Seton Hall students to their business.
Last semester, we worked with Hackensack University
Medical Center — a large organization with about 8,000
employees — to determine how to get employees to visit
its four gift stores more frequently.
How have students made a clear difference in a client’s
business? A great example is Stony’s (a restaurant in
downtown South Orange). The owner wanted to attract
more Seton Hall students to his restaurant. As a result
48
of the market-research project recommendations,
Stony’s increased sales 25 percent overall. On Wednesday
nights, business doubled, thanks to a special Seton
Hall Night promotion.
Is Planet Honda a repeat customer? Planet Honda has done
three projects with us. First they wanted to understand
how well their TV commercials resonated with potential
customers. They also did a “Buyer” study to see why people
bought at Planet Honda and a “Rejecter” study to see why
people visited but did not purchase. The CEO said the
market research he did at Seton Hall was more valuable
than any the business had done before.
What specific skills have students learned? We’ve heard
from the Career Center that these project experiences
are showing up on our students’ resumes: “I moderated
a focus group; I designed a survey; I provided marketresearch consulting services for XYZ company.” Students
are learning critical skills they’ll be able to use in the
real world.
It’s true — we love our volunteers and donors. Both capture the spirit of our Seton Hall Family.
We
♥ You. Love Us Too! Give Today.
www.shu.edu/giving
How does the Market Research Center fit in with Stillman’s
philosophy of a practical business education? At Stillman,
we focus on experiential learning. The Market Research
Center, Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, Center for
Leadership Development, Sports Polling Center and
The Trading Room are all opportunities for students
to gain invaluable hands-on experience.
The motto we’ve used for the Market Research Center
is “University/Business Partnerships.” Students get a lot
out of the projects; they get real-world experience serving a
business in a consulting capacity. Businesses get excellent
customer insights and practical recommendations. A
Market Research Center project is a great opportunity
for alumni with businesses to re-engage with the school
in a “win-win” situation. I hope our alumni will take
advantage of the Center, contact us and explore how
we can partner together to benefit their business. ■
Choose where to designate your gift!
■ Area of Greatest Need
■ College of Arts and Sciences
■ College of Education and Human Services
■ College of Nursing
■ University Libraries
13178
On the first day back to campus in January, students
from the Stillman School of Business led a food drive
for the Community FoodBank of New Jersey. Students
had connected with the nonprofit the previous semester
through a project in the school’s Market Research Center
and were driven to replenish a 100,000-pound food loss
suffered as a result of Superstorm Sandy.
Each semester, anywhere from 25-75 students participate
in market-research projects for a range of clients. Student
teams, supervised by professors and the center’s staff,
work with business owners, managers and executives
to tackle various business challenges. Students conduct
market research to uncover key insights, find possible
improvements to products or services, and ultimately
develop recommendations for the businesses they work
with. To learn more about the center and its projects,
Seton Hall magazine editor Pegeen Hopkins sat down
with the center’s director, Adam Warner.
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Name as appears on card: ________________________________
Signature:______________________________________________
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Mail to: Seton Hall University, 457 Centre St., South Orange, NJ 07079
Donate securely online at www.shu.edu/giving
For more information, please contact the Seton Hall Fund office
at 973-378-9826 or email us at setonhallfund@shu.edu.
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Find out. Seton Hall Weekend. October 4-6, 2013